Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- PART ONE DEFINING HUMAN RIGHTS AND DELIMITING THE SCOPE OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
- 1 Preliminaries: What Is a Human Right, and What Activities Implicate Freedom of Expression?
- 2 Freedom of Expression and Regulations that Affect Messages But are Not Enacted for That Reason
- 3 The Puzzles of Governmental Purpose
- PART TWO THE CORE OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION: GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS AND ACTS TAKEN TO AFFECT MESSAGES
- PART THREE THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
- EPILOGUE
- Index
3 - The Puzzles of Governmental Purpose
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- PART ONE DEFINING HUMAN RIGHTS AND DELIMITING THE SCOPE OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
- 1 Preliminaries: What Is a Human Right, and What Activities Implicate Freedom of Expression?
- 2 Freedom of Expression and Regulations that Affect Messages But are Not Enacted for That Reason
- 3 The Puzzles of Governmental Purpose
- PART TWO THE CORE OF FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION: GOVERNMENT REGULATIONS AND ACTS TAKEN TO AFFECT MESSAGES
- PART THREE THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION
- EPILOGUE
- Index
Summary
In the previous chapter I established that freedom of expression is not implicated by governmental regulations and acts that affect what messages are received, for all regulations and acts have message effects. What remains as a candidate principle for defining the scope of freedom of expression is principle (5), which holds that freedom of expression is implicated whenever government acts for the purpose of affecting what messages are received. In the next two chapters I shall examine principle (5) in terms of what laws come within it and whether invalidation of such laws in the name of freedom of expression is morally warranted. In this chapter, however, I want to raise some problems that attend any principle that makes the validity of laws turn on the purposes of the government in enacting them.
The Various Venues of Governmental Purpose
There is no difficulty in locating the governmental purpose to affect messages in laws that by their terms predicate civil or criminal liability on communicating messages with specified content. Thus, a law forbidding “public displays of contempt for the American flag” (such as burning an American flag in public with the intent to express hostility toward America or American policy) comes squarely within principle (5). Its governmental purpose to affect messages is found on its face. It is the type of law that the next chapter addresses.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Is There a Right of Freedom of Expression? , pp. 38 - 52Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005