This volume an updated collection of essays presented by leading scholars at a Hofstra University conference on group defamation provides a cross-disciplinary examination of hate speech. Beginning with the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in R.A.V. v. St. Paul the volume analyzes the problem from historical anthropological comparative-legal and American constitutional law perspectives.Among the topics examined are the role of hate speech in the persecutions of Jews and Asians during World War II in the subordination of Blacks Native Americans and women and the pros and cons of the legal controls on hate speech adopted in such countries as Australia Canada and Israel. The section on American constitutional law features several proposed statutes outlawing hate speech along with model court opinions supporting and attacking their constitutionality. The volume will be of great interest to scholars and students in the areas of intergroup relations and constitutional law as well as policy makers.
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