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Description
What does free speech mean?
In this book, Paul Wragg argues for a universal formulation of free speech drawn exclusively from autonomy. He demonstrates that although the right has some applicability to the horizontal plane, it is more restrictive in some contexts, and more empowering in others, than the literature presently recognises.
Reading across jurisdictions produces different, often conflicting, answers to the question of what free speech means. As global citizens of the digital age, we need a reliable means of judging national practices to know if our free speech rights are authentic.
Theory is vital to this endeavour. Yet, within it, we find a discourse that is intuitive, lacking coherence, and tainted by national experience. It is a narrative rooted in vertical tropes of state power and democratic participation, seeking application to the horizontal world of private actors controlling the public sphere through social media, employability, and privacy-based interests.
This innovative, rigorously researched, and comprehensive restatement of the right to free speech is both topical and important. It is an invaluable resource for policy makers, practitioners, and commentators across the globe.
Table of Contents
1. Authenticity
Part II: Methodology
2. Orthodoxy
3. Justification as Definition
4. Proof
Part III: Restatement
5. The Problem of Individuality
6. Epistemology
7. Democratic Participation
8. Irrationality
Part IV: Horizontality
9. Digital Speech
10. Public Interest Speech
11. Workplace Speech
Part V: Conclusion
12. A Radical Restatement
Product details
| Published | 29 May 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 368 |
| ISBN | 9781509958290 |
| Imprint | Hart Publishing |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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In recent years the free speech ecosystem has changed beyond all recognition, necessitating us to question the meaning of free speech, and to re-think the theoretical foundations upon which 'the right to free speech' is laid. Paul Wragg's novel and convincing restatement of free speech theory shakes these foundations and reinvigorates this debate. This book is, therefore, not only timely and ground-breaking, but will be the lodestar that free speech theorists and lawyers follow for years to come.
Dr Peter Coe, Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham
























