Debate

WACC photo competition runner-up 2008 by Boaz RottemThis section includes perspectives on how communication rights might be realised at different levels.

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Article Title Author(s) Publication Year
1. The Right to Information in Latin America Toby Mendel 2009
2. Safeguarding the Right to Information in India 2009
3. Global Debates on the Right to Communicate Lauren B. Movius 2008
4. A Human Rights Perspective on the Digital Divide: A Human Right to Communicate William, M. 2004
5. Rights: Fourth Generation Human Rights? Human Rights in Information Society Neshat, N. Saeid 2004
6. Human Rights for the Information Society Hamelink, Cees J. 2003
7. Translating a right to communicate into policy Birdsall, William F , McIver, William J. Jr. , Rasmussen, Merrilee 2003
8. Freedom(s) of the Press in Latin America: Reconciling Societal and Individual Rights in International Law Perkins, Michael 2002
9. Identity, Culture and the Right to Communicate: Aboriginal Peoples in the Canadian Constitution (Section 6 in rights of the marginalized.) Rasmussen, Merrilee 2002
10. Revisiting media and human rights. Tomaselli, Keyan and Young, Miranda 2001
11. Through the Net to freedom: information, the Internet and human rights Brophy, Peter , and Halpin, Edward 1999
12. Communicating the Right to Development: Towards Human Rights-Based Communication Policies in Third World Countries Linden, Ank 1999
13. Global Communication Policy and the Realization of Human Rights Raboy, Marc 1998
14. The Politics of World Communication: A Human Rights Perspective. Hamelink, Cees J. 1994
15. Human rights and the right to communicate. Greer, Kenneth C. 1992
16. Commercial Speech, Transborder Data Flows and the Right to Communicate under International Law Feldman, Mark B. 1983
17. Comunicación, desarrollo y derechos humanos UNICEF