Communications Law Journal
The Journal of Computer, Media and Telecommunications Law
Editor in Chief - Dr Peter Coe, University of Birmingham

Frequency: Quarterly
Type: Journal
Format: Print
ISSN: 17467616
Pricing:
£675 (1 year subscription, UK)
£1,300 (2 year subscription, UK)
£695 (1 year subscription, overseas)
Authoritative comment and analysis delivered to your desk, four times a year.
Communications Law is a well-respected, peer reviewed, quarterly journal covering the broad spectrum of legal issues arising in the telecoms, IT and media industries. Each issue brings you opinion and discussion from the field of communications law.
Benefit from:
• Editorial comment
• Coverage of pertinent UK and international issues
• Authoritative commentary and analysis
• First-hand experience in the field from a dedicated panel of industry experts
Make sure you are up-to-date with the legal issues affecting your company, right now.
Editorial Board
Dr Eliza Bechtold, University of Aberdeen
Paul Chamberlain, Paramount
Clive Davies, Independent Legal Consultant
Campbell Deane, Bannatyne, Kirkwood, France & Co
Dr Faith Gordon, ANU College of Law, The Australian National University
Dr Jeevan Hariharan, Queen Mary University
Dr Rebecca Moosavian, University of Leeds
Rem Noormohamed, Lawyer, Fieldfisher
Dr Jelena Surculija Milojevic, University of Belgrade
Judith Townend, University of Sussex
Dr Paul Wragg, University of Leeds
Email us to subscribe to Communications Law
Contents from previous issues:
Communications Law 30.4 (December 2025) contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Warning Shot Fired: Why Reputational Harm Damages Deserve a Place in the Tort of Misuse of Private Information - Floyd Alexander-Hunt
- Formulating IT Service Level Regimes - Clive Davies
- Book Review
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 30.3 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Breach of Confidence and Disclosures in the Private Interest: On the Viability of Importing a Qualified Privilege Defence from Defamation Law - Eugene C Lim
- Hearing prisoners’ voices: prisoners’ rights to free speech
and access to the media - Steve Foster - Recent Developments
Communications Law 30.2 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- SLAPPs in England and Wales: The issues and the evidence - Paul Wragg
- Journalism as the lifeblood of democracy: How can we ensure
it is protected?- Dr Gemma Horton - Case note and comment
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 30.1 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Extending Outsourcing Contracts – Clive Davies
- Why are journalistic ethics often ignored when celebrities die? – Polly Rippon
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 29.4 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Reflections on balancing Articles 8 and 10 in the context of MPI – past, present and future – Helen Fenwick
- Book Review
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 29.3 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Models of regulating the amplification of online content: A comparative study of the EU’s Digital Services Act and the UK’s Online Safety Act - João Tornada
- The Defamation Act 2013 – 10 Years Later – Daniel Shaw and Mollie Jackson
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 29.2 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Editorial standards in transgender reporting: how do the UK press regulators navigate complaints and controversies?– Dimitris Akrivos
- Same as it ever was: no room for talking heads! National security, free speech and judicial deference – Steve Foster
- Recent Developments
Communications Law 29.1 contents:
- Editorial
- In Brief
- Navigating freezones in the influencerdom: a shadowlands guide – Alexandros Antoniou
- Recent Developments