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  • Cited by 1
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
December 2013
Print publication year:
2013
Online ISBN:
9780511998089
Subjects:
US Law, Law, Comparative Law

Book description

We live in an interconnected world in which expressive and religious cultures increasingly commingle and collide. In a globalized and digitized era, we need to better understand the relationship between the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and international borders. This book focuses on the exercise and protection of cross-border and beyond-border expressive and religious liberties, and on the First Amendment's relationship to the world beyond US shores. It reveals a cosmopolitan First Amendment that protects cross-border conversation, facilitates the global spread of democratic principles, recognizes expressive and religious liberties regardless of location, is influential across the world, and encourages respectful engagement with the liberty regimes of other nations. The Cosmopolitan First Amendment is the product of historical, social, political, technological and legal developments. It examines the First Amendment's relationship to foreign travel, immigration, cross-border communication and association, religious activities that traverse international borders, conflicts among foreign and US speech and religious liberty models, and the conduct of international affairs and diplomacy.

Reviews

‘Recent debates about the use of foreign law in American courts exemplify a growing awareness that law is no longer strictly a domestic matter. Timothy Zick's thorough and spirited arguments for recognizing the cross-border implications of the First Amendment's protection of freedom of speech, press, and religion relate closely to these larger issues of cosmopolitan law more broadly. The book is essential reading not only for those who agree with Zick's advocacy of a cosmopolitan First Amendment, but also for those who believe that a cosmopolitan understanding of law more generally would require the First Amendment to cut back its degree of protection.’

Frederick Schauer - David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Virginia

‘Global problems require global solutions - and this basic truth applies with full force in the case of expressive and religious freedoms no less than in other contexts. Professor Zick’s masterful work demonstrates quite persuasively that we now live in a globalized marketplace of ideas and why this fact requires us to consider carefully how other democratic polities define the shape and scope of expressive and religious freedoms. Moreover, he argues persuasively that if we wish to secure these precious civil liberties effectively - both at home and abroad - a more global, or cosmopolitan, vision of the First Amendment will be required. The Cosmopolitan First Amendment represents an important contribution to this essential dialogue.’

Ronald J. Krotoszynski, Jr - John S. Stone Chair, University of Alabama School of Law

‘This is an elegant reflection and celebration of the global resonance of America’s robust embrace of freedom of speech and religious liberty. Zick’s storytelling is graceful and engaging, and his arguments forceful and persuasive.’

Rodney Smolla - First Amendment scholar and litigator

'… innovative … Zick makes a persuasive case for the cosmopolitan perspective.'

Eric Barendt Source: International and Comparative Law Quarterly

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