01584 2200229 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020002300097041000800120082001100128084001700139100002200156245007000178260004400248300003300292500001900325520093500344650002701279990002401306990002401330INLIS00000000000152420221108091236 a0010-0520001524221108 | | ind  a0 - 19 -566496 - 5 aind a347.07 a347.07 JAC o0 aJaconelli, Joseph1 aOpen Justice : A Critique of The Public Trial /cJoseph Jaconelli aNew Delhi :bOxford Univesity Press,c- aX1, 369 hal ; 24 cm ;c24 cm aIndeks : Index aIt has long been a fundamental norm of civilized legal systems that the administration of justice is conducted in full view of the public. This is regarded as particularly important in criminal cases, where the accused is traditionally viewed as possessing the rigt to a public trial. The rise of the modern media, , especially television, has created the possiblilty of a global audience for high profile cases. Increasingly, however, it is seen that the open conduct of legal proceedings is prejudiial to important values such as the privacy of parties, rehabilitative considerations, national security, commercial secrecy, and the need to safeguard witnesses and jurors from intimidation. In this topical new study, Joseph Jaconelli explores these issues and offers a critical examination, in the context of English law, of the values served by open justice and the tensions that exist between it and other important interests. 4aPemeriksaan Pengadilan a01019/MKRI-P/I-2005 a01019/MKRI-P/I-2005