Home / Humanities / History / World History / The First Amendment and LGBT Equality: A Contentious History

The First Amendment and LGBT Equality: A Contentious History

AUTHOR
Price
€45.00
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Free shipping

Conservative opponents of LGBT equality in the United States often couch their opposition in claims of free speech, free association, and religious liberty. It is no surprise, then, that many LGBT supporters equate First Amendment arguments with resistance to their cause. The First Amendment and LGBT Equality tells another story, about the First Amendment’s crucial yet largely forgotten role in the first few decades of the gay rights movement.

Between the 1950s and 1980s, when many courts were still openly hostile to sexual minorities, they nonetheless recognized the freedom of gay and lesbian people to express themselves and associate with one another. Successful First Amendment cases protected LGBT publications and organizations, protests and parades, and individuals’ right to come out. The amendment was wielded by the other side only after it had laid the groundwork for major LGBT equality victories.

Carlos A. Ball illuminates the full trajectory of this legal and cultural history. He argues that, in accommodating those who dissent from LGBT equality on grounds of conscience, it is neither necessary nor appropriate to depart from the established ways in which American antidiscrimination law has, for decades, accommodated equality dissenters. But he also argues that as progressives fight the First Amendment claims of religious conservatives and other LGBT opponents today, they should take care not to erode the very safeguards of liberty that allowed LGBT rights to exist in the first place.

Author: Ball Carlos A.
Publisher: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 349
ISBN: 9780674972193
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2017

Introduction
I. From the First Amendment to LGBT Equality
1. Moral Displacement and Obscenity Law
2. Coming Together and Free Expression
3. Coming Out and Free Expression
4. Activism in and out of the Courts
II. From LGBT Equality to the First Amendment
5. The Race and Gender Precedents
6. LGBT Equality and the Right to Exclude
7. Marriage Equality and Religious Liberty
Conclusion
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index

Carlos A. Ball is Distinguished Professor of Law and Judge Frederick Lacey Scholar at Rutgers Law School.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist