Freedom of expression revisited: citizenship and journalism in the digital era
Includes bibliographical references
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Includes bibliographical references
In: Information law series 14
In: Centre for Free Expression, 2023
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In: Health and human rights, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 66-81
ISSN: 1079-0969
In: Canada Watch, Band 2, Heft 6
ISSN: 1191-7733
In: EUI Working Papers LAW No. 2012/20
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Working paper
In: EUI Working Papers - LAW 2012/20
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Working paper
In: Government publications review: an international journal, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 467-469
In: Cuban studies: Estudios cubanos, Heft 19, S. 107-142
ISSN: 0361-4441
A lo largo de treinta anos de gobierno revolucionario, la politica oficial hacia los intelectuales ha oscilado entre periodos de relativa flexibilidad y periodos de controles rigidos. La unica constante que emerge de estas tres decadas de contradicciones en las relaciones entre el escritor y la revolucion es la dependencia le la expresion literaria del clima politico prevaleciente en Cuba
World Affairs Online
In: Human Rights Quarterly, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 429
In: Race & class: a journal for black and third world liberation, Band 55, Heft 4, S. 8-28
ISSN: 1741-3125
A confluence of interests and forces among Norwegian political, media and legal elites since the Rushdie affair and the 'Mohammed cartoon crisis' have created conditions in which minority protections against racist and discriminatory speech as guaranteed by Norwegian law, and Norwegian obligations under international law, have been rendered all but ineffective – in the name of stronger protections for freedom of expression. In the event, Islamophobia and anti-Muslim racism have not only often gone unchallenged, but have been amplified and disseminated both through the extreme rightwing presence on the internet, and in mainstream and respected Norwegian print media. The ideology of Anders Breivik, perpetrator of the massacre of 22/7/2011, was not isolated, but forms part of a larger and by many accounts growing phenomenon. Successive government commissions on freedom of expression in Norway have only exacerbated this tendency. This article explores the philosophical and political underpinnings of the freedom of expression debate in Norway and warns about the threat to liberal democracy and equal citizenship from the sanitising and mainstreaming of virulent far-right racism and extremism.
In: Government publications review: an international journal, Band 16, Heft 5, S. 425-428
In: Philosophia 45:3 (2017).
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