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About this product
Product Identifiers
PublisherBloomsbury Publishing
ISBN-101509943900
ISBN-139781509943906
eBay Product ID (ePID)18050097846
Product Key Features
Number of Pages216 Pages
Publication NamePositive Free Speech : Rationales, Methods and Implications
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year2021
SubjectMedia & the Law, Human Rights, General
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaLaw, Political Science
AuthorAndrew Scott
FormatTrade Paperback
Dimensions
Item Height0.5 in
Item Weight12.3 Oz
Item Length9.6 in
Item Width6.7 in
Additional Product Features
Intended AudienceCollege Audience
Dewey Edition23
Dewey Decimal323.443
Table Of Content1. Complicating Freedom: Investigating Positive Free Speech Andrew T Kenyon 2. Providing a Platform for Speech: Possible Duties and Responsibilities Thomas Gibbons 3. Positive Protection for Speech and Substantive Political Equality Jacob Rowbottom 4. The Access to Information Dimension of Positive Free Speech Andrew Scott and Abbey Burke 5. Promoting Civic Discourse: A Form of Positive Free Speech under the Constitution of Ireland? Eoin Carolan 6. The State of Affairs of Freedom: Implications of German Broadcasting Freedom Andrew T Kenyon 7. The Collective Speech Rights of Minorities Sally Broughton Micova 8. The Positive Right to Freedom of Expression and Party Anonymity in Legal Proceedings Merris Amos 9. Positive Free Speech and Public Access to Courts Judith Townend 10. Hiding the Truth in the Shadow of the Law? Addressing the Misuse of Confidentiality Clauses in Public Authority Contracts Andrew Scott 11. Speaking and Governing through Freedom of Access to Environmental Information Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay and Laura Maxim
SynopsisFreedom of expression is generally analysed as a bare liberty against restraint by state action. Underpinning rationales for freedom of speech very often imply, however, that the concept also has important positive aspects, and that to be truly 'democratic' the modern polity requires more than negative freedom. In contemporary conditions, this understanding of free speech raises matters such as media diversity or pluralism, the concept of voice and access to the public sphere, access to information, and the need to rethink the audience in relation to public speech. Whether securing positive free speech is a matter of politics or of law, a task for legislatures or for courts, is an open question. On one level, any programme of inculcating positive dimensions of free speech might be understood as inherently polycentric and hence political in character. Yet, a number of jurisdictions evince enhanced legal recognition for the principle. The aim of this collection of papers is to interrogate the rationales of positive free speech, to consider the political and juridical methods by which it has or may be more fully reflected in the modern state, and to consider the range of practical contexts in which its valorisation has or would have significant implications. The contributors are drawn from an array of European and international jurisdictions. They include academic lawyers and communications researchers