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Freedom of Commercial Expression »

Book cover image of Freedom of Commercial Expression by Roger A. Shiner

Authors: Roger A. Shiner, Roger Shiner
ISBN-13: 9780198262619, ISBN-10: 0198262612
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Date Published: January 2004
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Roger A. Shiner

Roger A. Shiner spent most of his career at the University of Alberta, becoming Assistant Professor of Philosophy in 1966, Associate Professor in 1972, and Professor in 1977. He also taught as Sessional Lecturer in Jurisprudence in the Faculty of Law. He is now Professor of Philosophy at Okanagan University College.

Book Synopsis

The U.S. Supreme Court extended constitutional protection to commercial expression or speech in 1976. The European Court of Human Rights and the Supreme Court of Canada subsequently did likewise. Historically, however, as Chief Justice Rehnquist memorably remarked in dissenting from the 1976 decision, freedom of expression relates to public decision-making as to political, social, and other public issues, rather than the decision of a particular individual as to whether to purchase one or another kind of shampoo. For all that, courts are now granting constitutional protection to the commercial advertising of organizations such as tobacco manufacturers, breweries, and discount liquor stores.

In this book, Roger Shiner subjects to critical examination the history of and reasoning behind the extension to commercial expression of the principles of freedom of expression. He examines the institutional history of freedom of commercial expression as a constitutional doctrine, and argues that the history is one of ad hoc, not logical, development. In examining the arguments used in support of freedom of commercial expression, he shows that even from within the borders of liberal democratic theory, constitutional protection for commercial expression is not philosophically justified. Commercial corporations cannot possess an original autonomy right to free expression. Moreover, the claim that there is a hearers' right to receive commercial expression which advertisers may borrow is invalid. Freedom of commercial expression does not fit the best available models for hearers' rights. Regulation of commercial expression is not paternalistic. The free flow of commercial information is not automatically a good, and in any case commercial expression rarely in fact involves information.

Table of Contents

Table of Cases
1Introduction1
Pt. IThe Contingencies of Institutional History
2Commercial Speech in the United States 1900-7625
3Commercial Speech in the United States 1976-200251
4Commercial Expression in Canada70
5Commercial Expression in Europe94
6Conclusion111
Pt. IITheoretical Interlude
7The Conceptual Background119
8The Importance of Theory Determined136
Pt. IIIThe Arguments Assessed
9Original Autonomy Rights163
10Hearers' Rights192
11Commercial Expression and the Self-realization Value221
12Autonomy, Paternalism, and Commercial Expression239
13The Free Flow of Commercial Information270
14Lifestyle Advertising and the Public Good308
15Retrospect and Prospect324
Bibliography333
Index343

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