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Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast

Faculty Division Bookshelf by The Federalist Society

Jul 6, 201238:10News & Politics

During the past decade, courts have struggled to reconcile anti-discrimination statutes with claims by private organizations to First Amendment protection for decisions regarding their missions and membership. Can the Bo...

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Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast is an episode from Faculty Division Bookshelf by The Federalist Society. During the past decade, courts have struggled to reconcile anti-discrimination statutes with claims by private organizations to...

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Episode Details

Published Jul 6, 2012, 38:10 long, audio available.

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What is Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast about?

During the past decade, courts have struggled to reconcile anti-discrimination statutes with claims by private organizations to First Amendment protection for decisions regarding their missions and membership. Can the Boy Scouts expel a gay Scoutmaster? (Boy Scouts of America v. Dale) Can a state law school deny official recognition to a religious club that requires members to affirm certain beliefs regarding homosexuality? (Christian Legal Society v. Martinez) In resolving these questions courts have frequently invoked the freedom of "expressive association," a phrase that appears nowhere in the text of the First Amendment but has been a part of modern judicial doctrine. -- In Liberty’s Refuge, Professor Inazu argues that this "expressive association" mode of analysis is at least in part responsible for what he argues is inadequate protection for associational autonomy--and that a return to the more textually and historically grounded "right of the people peaceably to assemble" is necessary to recapture the benefits of a meaningful pluralism. The Constitution contemplated forcefully dissenting political and expressive groups that would serve as a check on majority rule’s tendency to turn into a force for stifling nonconformity. To maintain an environment in which these groups will flourish, Inazu contends, our First Amendment jurisprudence must recover a more robust conception of associational autonomy grounded in a better understanding of the centrality and breadth of the assembly right. -- John Inazu, a professor at Washington University Law School, is joined by critical commenter Michael McConnell, the Richard & Frances Mallery Professor and Director of the Constitutional Law Center at Stanford Law School, as well as Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, to discuss the book.

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Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast is an episode from Faculty Division Bookshelf by The Federalist Society.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 38:10 long.

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This episode was published on Jul 6, 2012.

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Where can I listen to Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast?

You can listen to Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Liberty’s Refuge - Faculty Book Podcast is from Faculty Division Bookshelf by The Federalist Society.

What are the episode details?

Published Jul 6, 2012 and 38:10 long