Front cover image for Freedom of speech: volume 21, part 2

Freedom of speech: volume 21, part 2

Jeffrey Paul (Author)
Freedom of expression will encounter new and continuing controversies in the twenty-first century. The twelve legal scholars and philosophers whose work appears in this volume examine the history of free speech doctrine, its relevance to other social and personal values, and the radical critiques it has withstood in recent years.
Print Book, English, 2004
Cambridge University Press, 2004
458 sidor ; 15.4 cm
9780521603751, 0521603757
1023400036
1. Equality and expression: the radical paradox Andrew Altman; 2. The politics of free speech Scott D. Gerber; 3. The academic betrayal of free speech Daniel Jacobson; 4. Free speech and offensive expression Judith Wagner DeCew; 5. Copyright, trespass, and the first amendment: an institutional perspective Lillian R. BeVier; 6. Restrictions on judicial campaign speech: silencing criticism of liberal activism Lino A. Graglia; 7. Property rights and free speech: allies or enemies? James W. Ely, Jr; 8. Expressive association after Dale David E. Bernstein; 9. Autonomy and informational privacy, or gossip: the central meaning of the first amendment C. Edwin Baker; 10. Current proposals for media accountability in light of the first amendment Ronald D. Rotunda; 11. Free speech in the American founding and in modern liberalism Thomas G. West; 12. Democratic ideals and media realities: a puzzling free press paradox Michael Kent Curtis.