Affiliation:
1. University of Chicago Law School, USA
Abstract
In the formative years of the modern First Amendment, civil liberties lawyers struggled to justify their participation in a legal system they perceived as biased and broken. For decades, they charged, the courts had fiercely protected property rights even while they tolerated broad-based suppression of the “personal rights,” such as expressive freedom, through which peaceful challenges to industrial interests might have proceeded. This article focuses on three phases in the relationship between the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the courts in the period between the world wars: first, the ACLU’s attempt to promote worker mobilization by highlighting judicial hypocrisy; second, its effort to induce incremental legal reform by mobilizing public opinion; and third, its now-familiar reliance on the judiciary to insulate minority views against state intrusion and majoritarian abuses. By reconstructing these competing approaches, the article explores the trade-offs – some anticipated and some unintended – entailed by the ACLU’s mature approach.
Subject
Law,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Cultural Studies
Cited by
3 articles.
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1. Cold War Rights;Human Rights in Twentieth-Century Australia;2019-12-31
2. AGAINST INTOLERANCE: THE RED SCARE ROOTS OF LEGAL LIBERALISM;The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era;2019-01
3. The Vagrancy Law Challenge and the Vagaries of Legal Change;Law & Social Inquiry;2018