I promised last night to post a full post of my take on the historic R v Walsh decision, and that will follow later today. I did however want to explain for any non-Twitter followers why I seemed oddly silent during the whole case. A few people got in touch asking me what my views were and I'm afraid I was less than helpful. As you've probably now realised, I was an expert witness in the case which prevented me from commenting on what was going on. Sorry for not being more helpful but I hope you now understand.
There's an excellent summary and analysis of the case from Alex Dymock which makes a really useful initial briefing on things.
You can read a little more in this piece.
This piece examines R v Walsh alongside R v Peacock and asks if the law is 'homophobic'. There's a nice mention of some of my work published earlier this year (those REF chants in my sleep must be paying off).
Thursday, 9 August 2012
R v Walsh: 'Extreme' Pornography on Trial #porntrial
Posted by Chris Ashford on 07:35 in Criminal Justice and Immigration Act Law Pornography R v Peacock R v Walsh Resource | Comments : 2
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Hi you have made a typo with the hashtag it is supposed to be #porntrial not #pornitrial !!
Elly/QRG
Whoops! Now corrected. Thanks.
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