Freedom of Speech: The Supreme Court and Judicial Review

Freedom of Speech: The Supreme Court and Judicial Review

by Martin Shapiro
Freedom of Speech: The Supreme Court and Judicial Review

Freedom of Speech: The Supreme Court and Judicial Review

by Martin Shapiro

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Overview

One of the great continuing disputes of American politics is about the role of the Supreme Court. Another is about the First Amendment and freedom of speech. This book is about both.

As a classic defense of the responsible yet openly political role of the Court, this book belies the notion -- reasserted most recently by Chief Justice Roberts -- that judges are just the neutral umpires in the legal ballgame. Especially in the realm of free speech, the Court must own up to its political function, Martin Shapiro argues in a way that seems to anticipate the current vogue of judicial "modesty." He takes head-on the supposed modesty and deference of Frankfurter, Hand, and others, and supports the legacy of "clear and present danger" inherited from Holmes and Brandeis. Though penned during tumultuous tests of protests, crackdowns, and investigations, the book is thus timeless in its insight as to the true position of the Court in the legal landscape.

In FREEDOM OF SPEECH, Martin Shapiro offers a provocative challenge to those who uphold the judicially “modest” interpretation of the role of the Supreme Court and who would keep the Court inviolate from the political process. Each branch of the government, he says, represents specific clienteles and defends specific interests and beliefs. Shapiro argues that one of the Supreme Court’s unique functions is to defend those interests which can find no defenders elsewhere; those speakers whose methods we may not be able to countenance, whose ideologies we may deplore, whose objectives we may fear.

From this original analysis of the role of the Supreme Court within the American political system, the author goes on to challenge the Court to use its powers of judicial review to fulfill its special responsibility by maintaining a “special preference for freedom.” Shapiro affirms the cause of judicial “activism” and clears the way for the Court to make a more empowering defense of the most cherished right.

More generally, and as applicable today as when he first wrote it, it is time for judges to acknowledge that constitutional review is not a simplistic task of submission; political and policy choices are necessarily made. "For if the people have been led by the Justices themselves, or for that matter by Fourth of July oratory, into believing that the Supreme Court merely puts the Constitution on top of a statute and lops off whatever sticks out over the edges, they have accepted the form but not the substance of review." The legacy of Marbury v. Madison, and the last century's legacy of Holmes and Brandeis in the arena of free speech, deserve better.

New quality ebook edition from Quid Pro Books, a digital and print publisher in law, history, and the social sciences. Contains linked table of contents, linked footnotes, and original index. Quid Pro's classics series are not just scanned and forgotten; they are carefully proofread and presented to respect the author and the reader, offering great foundational works of academic scholarship.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940012280688
Publisher: Quid Pro, LLC
Publication date: 02/11/2011
Series: Classics of Law & Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 334 KB

About the Author

Martin Shapiro is the James W. and Isabel Coffroth Professor of Law at the University of California at Berkeley. He has taught in the political science departments at Harvard and Stanford Universities and at UC Berkeley, UC Irvine, and UC San Diego. He joined the Berkeley law faculty in 1977. Shapiro earned his PhD in political science, in 1961, from Harvard.

In addition to this classic study, Shapiro is the author of Law and Politics in the Supreme Court; Supreme Court and Administrative Agencies; Courts: A Comparative and Political Analysis; and Who Guards the Guardians: Judicial Control of Administration. In 2003, he received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Law and Courts section of the American Political Science Association.
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