The Constitutional Protection of Freedom of Expression

Front Cover
University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2000 - Law - 312 pages

In this book, Richard Moon puts forward an account of freedom of expression that emphasizes its social character. Such freedom does not simply protect individual liberty from state interference; it also protects the individual's freedom to communicate with others. It is the right of the individual to communicate: an activity that is deeply social in character, and that involves socially created languages and the use of community resources, like parks, streets, and broadcast stations. Moon argues that recognition of the social dynamic of communication is critical to understanding the potential value and harm of language and to addressing questions about the scope and limits on one's rights to freedom of expression.

Moon examines the tension between the demands for freedom of expression and the structure of constitutional adjudication in the Canadian context. The book discusses many of the standard freedom of expression issues, such as the regulation of advertising, election spending ceilings, the restriction of hate promotion and pornography, state compelled expression, freedom of the press, access to state and private property and state support for expression. It examines several important Supreme Court of Canada decisions including Irwin Toy, Dolphin Delivery, RJR Macdonald, Keegstra and Butler.

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Contents

Truth Democracy and Autonomy
8
The Constitutional Adjudication of Freedom of Expression
32
The Regulation of Commercial and Political Advertising
76
The Regulation of Racist Expression
126
Compelled Expression and Freedom of the Press
182
Freedom of Expression and Judicial Review
218
Bibliography
297
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About the author (2000)

Richard Moon is Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Windsor.

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