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This volume examines three questions: Why do we value freedom of speech and expression? How does freedom balance multicultural sensitivity, minority rights and prevention of violence? Can traditional defenses of freedom of speech translate to other cultures?
The essays in this volume consider issues at the intersection of freedom of expression and racial, cultural, and gender diversity. The claims of those whose cultures and beliefs differ from our own are no longer the exclusive province of diplomats, as the Danish newspaper that published cartoons ridiculing Mohammed quickly learned. Negotiating the claims of freedom of expression as they come into open conflict with a wide diversity of viewpoints, both domestically and internationally, has become an increasingly complex task. The present volume seeks both to provide fresh insight into the philosophical grounds for limiting government restriction of expression and to address current tensions between freedom of expression and pluralism. The suppression of ideas by government is no doubt as old as government itself. Ideas help to keep governments in power, and opposing ideas can help them to lose it. As well, through most of the history of the world, the belief that some know b- ter than others what is true, what is right, and what is valuable has been sufficiently widespread to make it seem natural for those betters to dictate for the rest what they should believe. Just as clerics did not hesitate to dictate to their congregations, Christians did not hesitate to impose their beliefs on non-Christians in order to save their souls.
Reevaluates free speech against competing values in the in the context of international political and cultural tension Examines growing concerns about the discriminatory treatment of sexual, religious and immigrant minorities Illuminates 3 key issues: why we value freedom of speech; ho we weigh this against other values and how well traditional defences of this freedom can be transposed onto other cultures Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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The debate over the foundations and boundaries of freedom of speech, once a matter of balancing the individual rights of unpopular speakers against broader social interests, took on a new shape in the 1980s when feminists began to advocate restrictions on pornography and critical race theorists to advocate restriction of certain kinds of hate speech. These challenges to traditional liberalism brought into sharp focus the issues of why we value free speech and how much weight it should be given against competing values. Difficult as it is to resolve these issues domestically, we now face new challenges arising from the increasingly rapid dissemination of information across international borders in an atmosphere of considerable political tension. The riots in response to the publication of Danish cartoons ridiculing Mohammed and the death threats against Salman Rushdie indicate how dramatically the stakes have been raised. At the same time, there is increased concern over discriminatory treatment of sexual minorities, Muslims, and immigrants. Against this background, the essays in this volume seek to illuminate why we value freedom of speech and expression and how this freedom can be weighed against other values, such as multicultural sensitivity, the rights of racial and sexual minorities, and the prevention of violence, both domestically and internationally.
Contenu
Why Free Speech?.- Free Speech and the Social Technologies of Democracy, Scientific Inquiry and the Free Market.- Hate Speech in the Marketplace of Ideas.- The Marketplace of Ideas: A Siren Song for Freedom of Speech Theorists.- A Kantian Conception of Free Speech.- Free Speech, Equal Opportunity, and Justice.- Proscribed speech: the limits of free expression.- Is It Immoral to Prohibit Sexually Harassing Speech in the Classroom?.- The Morality of Using Nigger.- Incitement to Genocide and the Rwanda Media Case.- Hijabs and Headwraps: The Case for Tolerance.- Conspicuous Religious Symbols and Laïcité.- Intersections with other rights.- When Free Speech Meets Free Association: The Case of the Boy Scouts.- Oaths and the Pledge of Allegiance: Freedom of Expression and the Right to Be Silent.- Speaking Freely.- Social Institutions, Transgendered Lives, and the Scope of Free Expression.
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