Cart
Free US shipping over $10
Proud to be B-Corp

The Perilous Public Square David E. Pozen

The Perilous Public Square By David E. Pozen

The Perilous Public Square by David E. Pozen


$20.55
Condition - Very Good
Only 1 left

Summary

The Perilous Public Square brings together leading thinkers to identify and investigate todays multifaceted threats to free expression. They go beyond the campus and the courthouse to pinpoint key structural changes in the means of mass communication and forms of global capitalism.

Faster Shipping

Get this product faster from our US warehouse

The Perilous Public Square Summary

The Perilous Public Square: Structural Threats to Free Expression Today by David E. Pozen

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 have raised profound challenges for how we manage speech. New threats to political discourse are mountingfrom the rise of authoritarian populism and national security secrecy to the decline of print journalism and public trust in experts to the fake news, trolling, and increasingly subtle modes of surveillance made possible by digital technologies.

The Perilous Public Square brings together leading thinkers to identify and investigate todays multifaceted threats to free expression. They go beyond the campus and the courthouse to pinpoint key structural changes in the means of mass communication and forms of global capitalism. Beginning with Tim Wus inquiry into whether the First Amendment is obsolete, Matthew Connelly, Jack Goldsmith, Kate Klonick, Frederick Schauer, Olivier Sylvain, and Heather Whitney explore ways to address these dangers and preserve the essential features of a healthy democracy. Their conversations with other leading thinkers, including Danielle Keats Citron, Jelani Cobb, Frank Pasquale, Geoffrey R. Stone, Rebecca Tushnet, and Kirsten Weld, cross the disciplinary boundaries of First Amendment law, internet law, media policy, journalism, legal history, and legal theory, offering fresh perspectives on fortifying the speech system and reinvigorating the public square.

The Perilous Public Square Reviews

A perfect book for our time, and a true public service. A terrific and impressively diverse collection, exploring multiple threats to freedom of speech. -- Cass R. Sunstein, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard University
This volume is terrific and timely, and essential reading for anyone trying to make sense of how to think about expression, the platform monopolies, threats, and what the public sphere means today. It challenges shibboleths you may not realize you have. The diverse writers directly and eloquently fight each other in these pages, helping clarify both the stakes and the disagreements about not only what to do, but how to do talk about what to do with some of the most maddening and massive threats to democratic life and discussion. -- Zephyr Teachout, author of Break 'Em Up: Recovering Our Freedom from Big Ag, Big Tech, and Big Money
The Perilous Public Square provides the type of provocative, outside-the-box thinking we so desperately need right now. This collection brings together a stellar group of legal scholars in a format that includes the challenging of, and elaboration on, the core essays principal arguments. The result is a compelling and thought-provoking collection that represents a vital contribution to a number of contemporary communications policy debates. -- Philip M. Napoli, author of Social Media and the Public Interest: Media Regulation in the Disinformation Age
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes once famously said that free speech is an experiment, as all life is an experiment. The meaning and wisdom of that experiment long have been, and continue to be debated. This has never been truer than it is today, as new communications technologies and rapidly shifting political norms call into question old assumptions about speech, information, and their relationships to democratic governance. In this volume, top-notch thinkers from a range of backgrounds and perspectives tackle these vexing questions. The result is timely, engrossing, and deeply informed. A must-read for anyone who cares about the future of free speech and democracy. -- Heidi Kitrosser, Robins Kaplan Professor of Law, University of Minnesota
A must-read for anyone concerned about the many threats facing free expression today, be they from structural, private, or government (U.S. or otherwise) forces, as well as any number of bad actors. * Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books *
A thought-provoking, important collection of conversations that embody and manifest the complexity of the challenges that cyberspace presents to terrestrial legal thought." * Law and Politics Book Review *

About David E. Pozen

David E. Pozen is Charles Keller Beekman Professor of Law at Columbia Law School and served as the inaugural visiting scholar at the Knight First Amendment Institute. He is coeditor of Troubling Transparency: The History and Future of Freedom of Information (Columbia, 2018). In 2019, the American Law Institute awarded Pozen its Early Career Scholars Medal.

Table of Contents

Introduction, by David E. Pozen
1. Is the First Amendment Obsolete?, by Tim Wu
Reflections on Whether the First Amendment Is Obsolete, by Geoffrey R. Stone
Not Waving but Drowning: Saving the Audience from the Floods, by Rebecca Tushnet
2. From the Hecklers Veto to the Provocateurs Privilege, by David E. Pozen
The Hostile Audience Revisited, by Frederick Schauer
Unsafe Spaces, by Jelani Cobb
Heading Off the Hostile Audience, by Mark Edmundson
Costing Out Campus Speaker Restrictions, by Suzanne B. Goldberg
Policing, Protesting, and the Insignificance of Hostile Audiences, by Rachel A. Harmon
3. Straining (Analogies) to Make Sense of the First Amendment in Cyberspace, by David E. Pozen
Search Engines, Social Media, and the Editorial Analogy, by Heather Whitney
Of Course the First Amendment Protects Google and Facebook (and Its Not a Close Question), by Eric Goldman
The Problem Isnt the Use of Analogies but the Analogies Courts Use, by Genevieve Lakier
Preventing a Posthuman Law of Freedom of Expression, by Frank Pasquale
4. Intermediary Immunity and Discriminatory Designs, by David E. Pozen
Discriminatory Designs on User Data, by Olivier Sylvain
Section 230s Challenge to Civil Rights and Civil Liberties, by Danielle Keats Citron
To Err Is Platform, by James Grimmelmann
Toward a Clearer Conversation About Platform Liability, by Daphne Keller
5. The De-Americanization of Internet Freedom, by David E. Pozen
The Failure of Internet Freedom, by Jack Goldsmith
The Limits of Supply-Side Internet Freedom, by David Kaye
Internet Freedom Without Imperialism, by Nani Jansen Reventlow and Jonathan McCully
6. Crisis in the Archives, by David E. Pozen
State Secrecy, Archival Negligence, and the End of History as We Know It, by Matthew Connelly
A Response from the National Archives, by David S. Ferriero
Rescuing History (and Accountability) from Secrecy, by Elizabeth Goitein
Archiving as Politics in the National Security State, by Kirsten Weld
7. Authoritarian Constitutionalism in Facebookland, by David E. Pozen
Facebook v. Sullivan, by Kate Klonick
Meet the New Governors, Same as the Old Governors, by Enrique Armijo
Newsworthiness and the Search for Norms, by Amy Gajda
Profits v. Principles, by Sarah C. Haan
Contributors
Index

Additional information

CIN0231197136VG
9780231197137
0231197136
The Perilous Public Square: Structural Threats to Free Expression Today by David E. Pozen
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Columbia University Press
2020-06-16
408
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Perilous Public Square