Beyond the First Amendment
OCLC 56924685 | |
Beyond the First Amendment: The Politics of Free Speech and Pluralism is a book about freedom of speech and the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, written by author Samuel Peter Nelson. It was published by Johns Hopkins University Press in 2005.[1][2] In it, Nelson discusses how the more general notion of free speech differs from that specifically applied to the First Amendment in American law.
The book was positively received in reviews from academic and legal journals.
Author
Samuel Peter Nelson graduated from
Contents
Nelson's work discusses the differences between concepts in the United States involving the
Analysis
Beyond the First Amendment is cited as a reference in the Encyclopedia of American Civil Liberties edited by Paul Finkelman,
In a review of the book in
This effort to highlight important free speech issues in areas that are not governed by the First Amendment offers a particularly promising avenue for political scientists interested in American constitutionalism. Doctrinal scholarship is dominated by law professors who have special training in making legal arguments. By comparison, the constitutional issues that arise outside of constitutional law discussed in Beyond the First Amendment require the sort of special training in political theory and public policy that marks education in the social sciences."[4]
Graber concluded, "Beyond the First Amendment highlights how most crucial questions in institutional settings concern the value that ought to be placed on certain expressions rather than the legal right to engage in that expression".[4]
Peter G. Fish of Duke University reviewed Beyond the First Amendment for Political Communication, and wrote that Nelson's arguments within the book "provide able and well-crafted analyses of identifiable problems in communications".[5] Fish analyzed the nature of Nelson's argumentation, and commented "Nelson is seemingly offering a cost (injury to society)-benefit analysis for specific exercises of all kinds of speech in the context of all sorts of social values and relationships irrespective of whether such relationships are found in the public or private sphere".[5] Fish discussed Nelson's concepts within the framework of changing viewpoints on free speech through varying mediums of communication including online fora and speech in other venues: "How to weigh these elements also figures in Nelson's consideration of the Internet with its capacity for international communications—how to weigh the intent of an Internet speaker against an unintended hostile foreign audience shielded by its own local laws or even remote, but culturally distinctive, domestic audiences for that matter".[5] He posits that Nelson's plurality theory contains elements which would impact free speech in the future: "What Nelson terms 'incommensurable values' embedded in remote legal cultures not perceived by the speaker requires close attention to context, speaker's intention or lack thereof, and 'uptake' on the part of distant audiences. His is indeed a theory fraught with possibilities both favorable and unfavorable to an expanded scope for the contents of free speech".[5]
Beyond the First Amendment is an intriguing and important contribution to the literature on free speech.
—
Professor Steven B. Lichtman of the department of political science at the
See also
- Censorship
- Censorship in the United States
- Free content
- Freedom of speech by country
- Freedom of speech in the United States
- Freedom of the press
- Freedom of the Press Foundation
- International Freedom of Expression Exchange
References
- OCLC 475131041
- OCLC 56924685
- ^ ISSN 0009-4978.
- ^ S2CID 152388848. Archived from the originalon July 15, 2011. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
- ^ S2CID 143408888.
- ^ a b c d e f Lichtman, Steven B. (January 2006). "Beyond the First Amendment: The Politics of Free Speech and Pluralism". Law and Politics Book Review. 16 (1). American Political Science Association: 59–64. Archived from the original on 2011-07-20.
- ^ a b c "Dr. Samuel Nelson". Political Science and Public Administration. University of Toledo. August 17, 2009. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
- OCLC 56924685.
I argue that free speech is a political concept... (page x)... The pluralist framework I propose encourages a reinvigorated politics of free speech that values political debate and judgment about the boundaries of freedom of speech as opposed to the legal and proceduralist focus of debates about speech under the First Amendment framework. (page 3)
- ISBN 0-415-94342-6.
- ISBN 978-1-59158-591-6.
Further reading
- Cram, Ian (2006). Contested Words: Legal Restrictions on Freedom of Speech in Liberal Democracies. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 0-7546-2365-3.
- Curtis, Michael Kent (2000). ISBN 0-8223-2529-2.
- ISBN 0-262-57168-4.
- ISBN 0-8147-3103-1.
- Krotoszynski, Ronald J. (2009). The First Amendment in Cross-Cultural Perspective: A Comparative Legal Analysis of the Freedom of Speech. NYU Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-4825-1.
- ISBN 978-0-8166-5031-6.
External links
- Samuel P. Nelson, website of author
- Dr. Samuel Nelson, bio profile at The University of Toledo