{"product_id":"liberal-democracy-law-and-the-citizen-speaker-regulating-online-speech-9781509945825","title":"Liberal Democracy, Law and the Citizen Speaker:","description":"\u003cb\u003eBook Synopsis\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003eThis book delivers an original, theoretically informed analysis of the legal regulation of online speech. Rejecting the narrow pluralism of elitist and deliberative accounts of the citizen’s role in political discourse, the book defends a participatory account of speech in non-deliberative settings. The latter account of political pluralism best captures the republican democratic aspiration for popular, on-going authorship of the laws and the centrality of freedom to dissent in democratic theory. The legal and policy implications for governments and social media platforms of this inclusive envisioning of public discourse are then elaborated upon.   In the digital world, anyone with access to the internet can be a speaker. Speech on public platforms has become democratised. At the same time, aspects of online speech are plainly problematic. Concerns exist about disinformation, ‘fake news’, ‘deep fakes’, ‘weaponised speech’ and ‘trolls’. Offensive speech and the polarising effects of robustly expressed political opinion are also troublesome. These assorted downsides of democratised speech are said to undermine the integrity of democratic processes and institutions. Public debate is distorted and coarsened and the electorate are misled. How ought the liberal democratic state respond to these challenges?  The discussion is intended to be read by academics and researchers with interests in democratic theory, digital communications and freedom of expression. It offers a stimulating and distinctive contribution to debates about online speech.\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003eTable of Contents\u003c\/b\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cb\u003e1. Damaging Democracy? ‘Fake News’ and Moral Panics \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  Issues of Principle – How Open Should the Channels of Political Communication be in a Liberal Democracy? Tensions between Liberalism and Democracy  Popular Sovereignty in Liberal Constitutionalist Thinking  The Popular Sovereignty Challenge to Liberal Constitutionalism and Two Anxieties  Mapping Liberalism’s Ochlophobia – Current Restrictions on Freedom of Political Expression and a Republican Argument for Keeping the Channels of Political Change Open    \u003cb\u003e2. Closing Off the Agon: Legal Norms, Deliberative Democracy and ‘Improved’ European Public Discourse \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  The Liberal and the Democratic Polity  Privileging ‘Responsible’ Media – The Council of Europe’s Narrowed Conception of Political Pluralism  Threats to Political Pluralism from Liberal Elitist, Deliberative (Civic Republican), Epistemic Accounts of Democracy  Containing Majoritarian Passions – Pettit’s Aristocratic Republic of Reason and Critics  Conclusion – Ongoing Ineliminable Conflict: Truly Plural, Participatory Politics    \u003cb\u003e3. Enlightenment Rationality vs Machiavellian Pluralism \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  Enlightenment Roots of Deliberative Democracy and Some Counter-Enlightenment Objections  Public Reason and the Reasonable Citizen in Deliberative Democracy Scholarship  Conclusion    \u003cb\u003e4. Populism and Ochlophobia: The Denouncements of Popular Participation in Liberal Democracy \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  Anti-populist Themes in Mainstream Culture and Politics  Populism in Political Theory – A Response to Modern Representative Democracy and Redemptive Possibilities  Defending Oligarchical Rule Down the Ages – From Thucydides and Plato via Madison and Tocqueville to the Twentieth-century Critics of Mass Culture  Denying Isonomia Today – Ochlophobia in Liberal and Republican Political Theory  Countering Ochlophobia – Popular (Arendtian) Participation and the Value of Roman Discord  Conclusion    \u003cb\u003e5. Popular Participation and Political Dissent in Post-Revolutionary America: A Case Study of the Democratic Republicans \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  Federalist and Patrician Republican Accounts of the Political Citizen  Arendt, Human Action and the Mediated (Oligarchic) Political Life – The Failure of the US Founders to Preserve the Revolutionary Spirit  Jefferson’s Ward-republic: Preserving the Revolutionary Spirit  The Counter-Publics of Democratic Republican Clubs  Conclusion    \u003cb\u003e6. Official and Corporate Gatekeeping of Online Expression with Special Reference to False Statements on Public Affairs \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction  Protecting False Statements in Political Discourse – Some Principled Arguments  The Long Reach of UK Criminal Law into Online Political Discourse and Selected Comparisons Across Western Liberal Democracies State Regulation of Contentious Expression – OFCOM and the Coronavirus Disinformation Unit  The State as a Producer of False Statements  Conclusion    \u003cb\u003e7. Restoring the Agon: Re-opening the Channels of Political Change \u003c\/b\u003e Introduction – Swimming against the Liberal Tide  Dealing with the Problem of the ‘Ins’ and the Role of Plural Political Expression in Preserving Open and Fractious Republican Liberty  Common Carriers Not Editors – Public Forums and Banning Viewpoint Discrimination by Social Media Platforms Final Thoughts: The Threat to Self-government","brand":"Bloomsbury Publishing PLC","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":51019977982295,"sku":"9781509945825","price":85.5,"currency_code":"GBP","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0817\/1739\/5799\/files\/9781509945825.jpg?v=1750781946","url":"https:\/\/bookcurl.com\/products\/liberal-democracy-law-and-the-citizen-speaker-regulating-online-speech-9781509945825","provider":"Book Curl","version":"1.0","type":"link"}