Extreme speech and democracy / editors Ivan Hare, James Weinstein.

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Publication details:
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2009.
Edition:
1st edition
Record id:
66305
Subject:
Freedom of speech.
Hate speech.
Contents:
Part I. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Part II. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Part III. 15. 16. 17. Part IV. 18. 19. 20. 21. Part V. 22. 23. 24. Part VI. 25. 26. 27. 28. Part VII. 29. 30. 31. Introdcution and background
Freedom of speech in a globalized world
Extreme speech, public order, and democracy : lessons from the masses
Extreme speech under international and regional human rights standards
An overview of American free speech doctrine and its application to extreme speech
Hate speech in the United Kingdom : an historical overview
Extreme speech and liberalism
Hate speech
Hate speech
Autonomy and hate speech
Hate speech, public discourse, and the First Amendment
Wild-west cowboys versus cheese-eating surrender monkeys : some problems in comparative approaches to hate speech
Incitement and the regulation of hate speech in Canada : a philosophical analysis
Hate speech, extreme speech, and collective defamation in French law
Towards improved law and policy on hate speech-the 'clear and present danger' test in Hungary
Cumulative jurisprudence and hate speech : sexual orientation and analogies to disability, age, and obesity
Incitement to religious hatred and related topics
Blasphemy and incitement to religious hatred : free speech dogma and doctrine
The Danish cartoons, offensive expression, and democratic legitimacy
Criminalizing religiously offensive satire : free speech, human dignity, and comparative law
Religious speech and the expressive conduct that offend secular values
Religious speech that undermines gender equality
Homophobic speech, equality denial, and religious expression
Extreme religious dress : perspectives on veiling controversies
Endorsing discrimination between faiths : a case of extreme speech?
Incitement to, and glorification of, terrorism
Incitement to and glorification of terrorism
The Terrorism Act 2006 : discouraging terrorism
Radical religious speech : the ingredients of a binary world view
Holocaust denial
'On the internet, nobody knows you're a nazi': some comparative aspects of holocaust denial on the WWW
Expanding holocaust denial and legislation against it
The holocaust denial decision of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany
The politics of memory : bans and commemorations
Governmental and self-regulation of the media
Shouting fire from the nanny state to the heckler's veto : the new censorship and how to counter it
Extreme speech and American press freedoms
Extreme speech and the democratic functions of the mass media.
Summary:
This title considers the constitutionality of hate speech regulation, and examines how liberal democracies have adopted fundamental differences in the way they respond to racist or extreme expressions.
Note:
Includes index.
Detailed table of contents available via online link.
Table of contents and index are taken from the published work with the permission of the publisher.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Electronic reproduction. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2009. (Oxford Scholarship Online). Mode of access: World Wide Web. System requirements: Internet Explorer 6.0 (or higher) or Firefox 2.0 (or higher). Available as searchable text in HTML format. Access restricted to subscribing institutions.
Variant title:
Oxford scholarship online. Law collection.
ISBN:
9780199548781
Phys. description:
lvii, 647 p. ;23 cm