Simpson Center for The H u m a n i t i e s
FALL QUARTER 2017 HUM 498/POLS499E
Free Speech and Hate Speech (1 credit, C/NC) Instructor: Jamie Mayerfeld (Political Science) With Frederick Lawrence, author of Punishing Hate: Bias Crimes Under American Law Meeting Dates: • • • • •
Tuesday, October 10, 3:30-5 pm Tuesday, October 17, 3:30-5 pm Tuesday, October 24, 3:30-5 pm (with Frederick Lawrence) Tuesday, October 31, 3:30-5 pm Tuesday, November 7, 3:30-5 pm
All sessions meet in Communications 202. Frederick Lawrence will visit the UW in October 2017. We will use this occassion to study normative controversies relating to freedom of speech. Among the questions we consider: On what grounds, if any, should governments and universities restrict speech? Should they have a right to prohibit hate speech and restrict offensive speech? What is hate speech? Is it morally wrong, and if so, why? Setting aside legal debates, how should we as ordinary citizens and members of a university community respond to hate speech, offensive speech, false speech, or otherwise harmful or worthless speech? To address these questions, we will read philosophical and legal scholarship (including work by Lawrence) and excerpted court opinions. Students will deepen their understanding of the legal, moral, and philosophical controversy regarding hate speech; learn about and critically engage weighty arguments on different sides of the debate; and develop their own well-informed and wellreasoned positions on the questions raised.
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Frederick Lawrence is the Secretary and Chief Executive Officer of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and a Visiting Professor of Law & Public Policy at Georgetown University. A leading scholar of civil rights and free speech jurisprudence, Lawrence has served as President of Brandeis University, Dean of the George Washington University Law School, and Visiting Professor and Senior Research Scholar at Yale Law School. He is the author of Punishing Hate: Bias Crimes Under American Law (Harvard University Press, 1999). Lawrence recently testified before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee about free speech, academic freedom, and civility on American college campuses. Jamie Mayerfeld (Professor, Political Science) is the author of The Promise of Human Rights: Constitutional Government, Democratic Legitimacy, and International Law (2016) and Suffering and Moral Responsibility (1999). Questions? Contact Jamie Mayerfeld (
[email protected]).
206 Communications Box 353710 University of Washington Seattle, Washington USA 98195-3710
An add code is required for this course. Please contact Jamie Mayerfeld (
[email protected]) or Rachel Arteaga (
[email protected] at the Simpson Center) for an add code. Sponsored by the UW Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, with support from the Simpson Center for the Humanities.
tel 206 543.3920 simpsoncenter.org
[email protected]
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[email protected].