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Explores the history and development of the right of free association.
List of contents
1. What is freedom of association, and what is its denial? Larry Alexander; 2. Organized labor and American law: from freedom of association to compulsory unionism Paul Moreno; 3. 'Guilt by association' and the post-war civil libertarians Ken I. Kersch; 4. Industrial saboteurs, reputed thieves, communists, and the freedom of association Keith E. Whittington; 5. Expressive association and the ideal of the university in the Solomon Amendment litigation Tobias Barrington Wolff and Andrew Koppelman; 6. Should antidiscrimination laws limit freedom of association? The dangerous allure of human rights legislation Richard A. Epstein; 7. Freedom of association in historical perspective Stephen B. Presser; 8. The paradox of association Loren E. Lomasky; 9. The private society and the liberal public good in John Locke's thought Eric R. Claeys; 10. The Madisonian paradox of freedom of association Richard Boyd; 11. From the social contract to the art of association: a Tocquevillian perspective Aurelian Craiutu; 12. The Rawlsian view of private ordering Kevin A. Kordana and David H. Blankfein Tabachnick.
About the author
Ellen Frankel Paul is Deputy Director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center and Professor of Political Science at Bowling Green State University. She is the author of Moral Revolution and Economic Science, Property Rights and Eminent Domain, and Equity and Gender: The Comparable Worth Debate, and also the editor of numerous scholarly collections.Fred D. Miller, Jr. is Executive Director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center and Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University. He is the co-editor with David Keyt of A Companion to Aristotle's Politics, (Blackwell, 1991) and the co-author with Nicholas D. Smith of Thought Probes (Prentice-Hall, 2nd edition, 1988), as well as the author of numerous essays on ancient Greek philosophy. He has also co-edited numerous scholarly collections.Jeffery Paul is Associate Director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center, and Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University. He is the editor of Reading Nozick and is co-editor of Labor Law and the Employment Market. In addition, he has published numerous articles in various scholarly journals, and has co-edited several scholarly collections.
Summary
Freedom of association is a cherished liberal value. This book explores the history and development of the right of free association, and discusses the limits that may legitimately be placed on this right.