The perilous public square : structural threats to free expression today /
"Americans of all political persuasions fear that "free speech" is under attack. This may seem strange at a time when legal protections for free expression remain strong and overt government censorship minimal. Yet a range of political, economic, social, and technological developments...
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | |
---|---|
Other Authors / Creators: | Pozen, David E., editor, author. |
Other Corporate Authors / Creators: | Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University. |
Format: | eBook Electronic |
Language: | English |
Imprint: | New York : Columbia University Press, [2020] |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click here for full text at JSTOR |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- 1. Is the First Amendment Obsolete?
- Reflections on Whether the First Amendment Is Obsolete
- Not Waving but Drowning: Saving the Audience from the Floods
- 2. From the Heckler's Veto to the Provocateur's Privilege
- The Hostile Audience Revisited
- Unsafe Spaces
- Heading Off the Hostile Audience
- Costing Out Campus Speaker Restrictions
- Policing, Protesting, and the Insignificance of Hostile Audiences
- 3. Straining (Analogies) to Make Sense of the First Amendment in Cyberspace
- Search Engines, Social Media, and the Editorial Analogy
- Of Course the First Amendment Protects Google and Facebook (and It's Not a Close Question)
- The Problem Isn't the Use of Analogies but the Analogies Courts Use
- Preventing a Posthuman Law of Freedom of Expression
- 4. Intermediary Immunity and Discriminatory Designs
- Discriminatory Designs on User Data
- Section 230's Challenge to Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
- To Err Is Platform
- Toward a Clearer Conversation About Platform Liability
- 5. The De-Americanization of Internet Freedom
- The Failure of Internet Freedom
- The Limits of Supply-Side Internet Freedom
- Internet Freedom Without Imperialism
- 6. Crisis in the Archives
- State Secrecy, Archival Negligence, and the End of History as We Know It
- A Response from the National Archives
- Rescuing History (and Accountability) from Secrecy
- Archiving as Politics in the National Security State
- 7. Authoritarian Constitutionalism in Facebookland
- Facebook v. Sullivan
- Meet the New Governors, Same as the Old Governors
- Newsworthiness and the Search for Norms
- Profits v. Principles
- Contributors
- Index