Free Speech
What Everyone Needs to Know®
ISBN:
9780197699652
Publication date:
28/08/2024
Paperback
280 pages
ISBN:
9780197699652
Publication date:
28/08/2024
Paperback
280 pages
Nadine Strossen
Free Speech provides the essential background for understanding and contributing to our burgeoning debates about whether to protect speech with various kinds of controversial content, such as hate speech and disinformation: the applicable legal tenets and the strongest arguments for and against them.
Rights: World Rights
Nadine Strossen
Description
An engaging guide to the most important free speech rules, rationales, and debates, including the strongest arguments for and against protecting the most controversial speech, such as hate speech and disinformation.
This concise but comprehensive book engagingly lays out specific answers to myriad topical questions about free speech law, and also general explanations of how and why the law distinguishes between protected and punishable speech. Free Speech provides the essential background for understanding and contributing to our burgeoning debates about whether to protect speech with various kinds of controversial content, such as hate speech and disinformation: the applicable legal tenets and the strongest arguments for and against them.
The book focuses on modern First Amendment law, explaining the historic factors that propelled its evolution in a more speech-protective direction - in particular, the Civil Rights Movement. It highlights the many cases, involving multiple issues, in which robust speech-protective principles aided advocates of racial justice and other human rights causes. The book also shows how these holdings reflect universal, timeless values, which have been incorporated in many other legal systems, and have inspired countless thinkers and activists alike.
Without oversimplifying the complexities of free speech law, the book's lively question-and-answer format summarizes this law in an understandable, interesting, and memorable fashion. It addresses the issues in a logical sequence, presenting colorful facts and eloquent language from landmark Supreme Court opinions. It will be illuminating to a wide range of readers, from those who know nothing about free speech law, to those who have studied it but seek a well-organized summary of major doctrinal rules, as well as insights into their background, rationales, and interconnections.
About the author:
Nadine Strossen is a New York Law School Professor Emerita, past national President of the American Civil Liberties Union (1991-2008), a Senior Fellow with FIRE (the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) and a frequent speaker/media commentator on constitutional law and civil liberties, who has testified before Congress on multiple occasions. Her most recent book is HATE: Why We Should Resist It with Free Speech, Not Censorship (Oxford, 2018)
Nadine Strossen
Table of contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Free Speech Fundamentals
Chapter 2: The Most Important Arguments for and against Free Speech
Chapter 3: Free Speech Rights that the First Amendment Protects
Chapter 4: Speech Restrictions that the First Amendment Permits
Chapter 5: Speech Restrictions that the First Amendment Bars
Chapter 6: First Amendment Rights in Specific Government Institutions
Chapter 7: Other Legal Protections for Free Speech, in addition to the First Amendment
Chapter 8: Some Important Current Free Speech Issues
Conclusion
Nadine Strossen
Nadine Strossen
Review
"Books such as this will therefore have to keep being written, and this one should be welcomed accordingly." - James Wilson, The Law Society Gazette
Description
An engaging guide to the most important free speech rules, rationales, and debates, including the strongest arguments for and against protecting the most controversial speech, such as hate speech and disinformation.
This concise but comprehensive book engagingly lays out specific answers to myriad topical questions about free speech law, and also general explanations of how and why the law distinguishes between protected and punishable speech. Free Speech provides the essential background for understanding and contributing to our burgeoning debates about whether to protect speech with various kinds of controversial content, such as hate speech and disinformation: the applicable legal tenets and the strongest arguments for and against them.
The book focuses on modern First Amendment law, explaining the historic factors that propelled its evolution in a more speech-protective direction - in particular, the Civil Rights Movement. It highlights the many cases, involving multiple issues, in which robust speech-protective principles aided advocates of racial justice and other human rights causes. The book also shows how these holdings reflect universal, timeless values, which have been incorporated in many other legal systems, and have inspired countless thinkers and activists alike.
Without oversimplifying the complexities of free speech law, the book's lively question-and-answer format summarizes this law in an understandable, interesting, and memorable fashion. It addresses the issues in a logical sequence, presenting colorful facts and eloquent language from landmark Supreme Court opinions. It will be illuminating to a wide range of readers, from those who know nothing about free speech law, to those who have studied it but seek a well-organized summary of major doctrinal rules, as well as insights into their background, rationales, and interconnections.
About the author:
Nadine Strossen is a New York Law School Professor Emerita, past national President of the American Civil Liberties Union (1991-2008), a Senior Fellow with FIRE (the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) and a frequent speaker/media commentator on constitutional law and civil liberties, who has testified before Congress on multiple occasions. Her most recent book is HATE: Why We Should Resist It with Free Speech, Not Censorship (Oxford, 2018)
Read MoreReviews
"Books such as this will therefore have to keep being written, and this one should be welcomed accordingly." - James Wilson, The Law Society Gazette
Read MoreTable of contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Free Speech Fundamentals
Chapter 2: The Most Important Arguments for and against Free Speech
Chapter 3: Free Speech Rights that the First Amendment Protects
Chapter 4: Speech Restrictions that the First Amendment Permits
Chapter 5: Speech Restrictions that the First Amendment Bars
Chapter 6: First Amendment Rights in Specific Government Institutions
Chapter 7: Other Legal Protections for Free Speech, in addition to the First Amendment
Chapter 8: Some Important Current Free Speech Issues
Conclusion
Unconstitutional Constitutional Amendments
Yaniv Roznai
Conflict of Laws and Arbitral Discretion
Benjamin Hayward
The Cultural Defense of Nations
Liav Orgad
Diplomatic Law in a New Millennium
Edited by Paul Behrens
The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law
Edited by Mathias Reimann and Reinhard Zimmermann
The Oxford Handbook of Children's Literature
Lynne Vallone & Julia Mickenberg
Judges of the Supreme Court of India : 1950-1989
George H. Gadbois
Medical Negligence and the Law in India
Tapas Kumar Koley
Democracy and Its institutions
André Béteille