Description
The tension between national security requirements and the democratic principles of free speech is nowhere more evident than in the history of twentieth-century state communications. Political Censorship and the Democratic State: The Irish Broadcasting Ban delivers a thorough, data-driven historical audit investigating the functional operations of Section 31 of the Broadcasting Authority Act, which prohibited direct broadcasts of republican voices for decades.
The text looks deeply into declassified cabinet files, RTÉ programming logs, and legal challenges to evaluate how state restrictions transformed newsroom cultures and public awareness. The authors methodically guide advanced researchers through the legislative design, civil rights pushbacks, and international media comparisons that defined the era, skipping unnecessary jargon for high-impact critical analysis. This premium book serves as a mandatory manual for political science tracks, legal archives, and media research libraries.
Critical political and media frameworks evaluated within this study:
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Institutional Censorship Analytics: Breaks down specific state directives, editorial filtering mechanisms, and broadcast sanction logs across three decades.
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Socio-Political Impact Mapping: Documents the friction between official state security policies and journalists fighting for broadcast independence.
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Gold-Standard Scholarly Quality: Meticulously annotated with primary government text citations, extensive legal references, and peer-reviewed indices.






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