Law school hosts high-profile roundtable on defending freedom of the press

Law school hosts high-profile roundtable on defending freedom of the press

High-profile speakers from across politics, journalism, academia, legal practice and civil society came together at the University of Aberdeen on June 2 to discuss the protection of free speech in the media.

The roundtable event, hosted by the Anti-SLAPP Research Hub at the School of Law, was focused on experiences of strategic litigation against public participation (SLAPPs), with a view to developing a model Anti-SLAPP law for Scotland.

SLAPPs use the judicial process for purposes other than genuinely asserting, vindicating or exercising a right, aim to suppress communication on matters of public interest, and produce a broader chilling effect on free speech.

The use of SLAPPs to intimidate and silence public watchdogs is on the rise globally. This has led to action by the European Union, Council of Europe, and the Government of England and Wales. However, Scotland has yet to seriously entertain calls for Anti-SLAPP legislation.

The one-day workshop built on research and advocacy efforts by the Anti-SLAPP Research Hub at the European and national level.

Influential speakers in attendance included Gill Philips, director of editorial legal services at The Guardian newspaper; Rosalind McInnes, legal director at BBC Scotland; Charlie Holt, legal consultant at Greenpeace and the Coalition Against SLAPPs in Europe (CASE); Matthew Caruana Galizia, director of The Daphne Foundation; Susan Coughtrie, director of the Foreign Policy Centre; Nik Sunil Williams, policy and campaigns officer at Index on Censorship; Professor Dirk Voorhoof of Ghent University and founding member of the European Centre for Press and Media Freedom; and humanitarian campaigner and former MP Roger Mullin.

The Anti-SLAPP Research Hub was represented by Professor Justin Borg Barthet, Dr Erin Ferguson, Dr Eliza Bechtold and Dr Francesca Farrington.

The Hub was established in 2022 to strengthen the University of Aberdeen’s long-term commitment to furthering freedom of expression and the rule of law. It brings together expertise across a range of legal disciplines, including human rights law, freedom of information, privacy and data protection, private international law, EU law, dispute resolution, and substantive defamation law.

It has provided advice to CASE, the European Parliament and the European Commission, co-authored a Model Law which influenced the EU’s draft Anti-SLAPP Directive, and provided written submissions to the Scottish Parliament in support of a recent petition by Mr Mullin to introduce Anti-SLAPP reforms in Scotland.

“SLAPPs allow any individual or organisation with deep enough pockets to use the economic and psychological threat of legal action to pressure journalists not to publish what they know to be true,” said Convener Professor Borg Barthet.

Dr Farrington added that: “Through inaction, Scotland risks becoming a haven for SLAPP. SLAPPs have a chilling effect on free speech, impoverish political debate and overburden the court system with vexatious or frivolous litigation.”

Commenting on the workshop, lead organiser and Deputy Convener of the Hub, Dr Ferguson said: “The workshop was extremely informative and constructive. We were pleased to be able to bring such a diverse group of experts from across a wide range of sectors together to discuss the practical steps that can be taken to develop a model Anti-SLAPP law for Scotland.”

The workshop was part-funded by the University of Aberdeen’s Enabling Fund for Public Engagement with Research.

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