Author(s)
Thomas M. KeckKeywords
judicial empowermentjudicialization
free speech
freedom of speech
free expression
freedom of expression
Supreme Court of Canada
European Court of Human Rights
Law
K
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Drawing on an ongoing international data collection effort, this paper examines the free expression jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of Canada and the European Court of Human Rights in an effort to assess the political beneficiaries of judicial empowerment. Free expression is a universally recognized fundamental right, and it is a right that is regularly invoked in court by a rich diversity of political actors. As such, free speech law provides an illuminating window onto how constitutional courts respond to similar claims from differently situated claimants. This paper compares the response by two influential courts to free expression claims filed by for-profit businesses and by labor advocates.Date
2018-04-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:edd84493e74942fd8e371fdcfeb69e822075-471X
10.3390/laws7020014
https://doaj.org/article/edd84493e74942fd8e371fdcfeb69e82