Public Spaces, Marketplaces, and the Constitution : Shopping Malls and the First Amendment.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781438458458
- 342.7308/53
- KF4770.M36 2015
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: Built Environments and the Public Sphere -- Indicating Public Space on the Ground -- 1. Openness and Accessibility to Users -- 2. Support for Community Practice -- 3. Visibility and Revelation -- 4. Diversity, Tolerance, and Accommodation -- 5. Authenticity and Unexpectedness -- Political Theory and the Public Sphere: The Problem of Inclusion -- Chapter 2: Public Space as Democratic Practice: A History -- Flow and Ebb in the Greek Agora and Roman Forum -- Openness to Enclosure: Medieval and Early Modern Markets33 -- American Public Space Before and After the Jacksonian Era -- The Rise and Fall of Open-Minded Space in an American Century -- Chapter 3: The Public Forum Doctrine versus Public Space -- Opening Salvo-The Traditional Public Forum -- New Landscapes, New Contests -- Nonpublic Space -- Chapter 4: Closing the Commons in American Shopping Malls -- Prologue: Marsh, Public Function, and the Preferred Position of Speech -- Public Space Flows in the Plaza: Logan Valley Plaza -- Black and White and Reed All Over: The Dissents -- Speech Goes Inside the Mall, Gets Turned Back: Lloyd Corporation -- The Mall Is Where the People Go-Marshall's Dissent -- Morphology in the Mall and the Final Unraveling of Public Function: Hudgens92 -- A Coda on Space in the Mall: Marshall's Eulogy to Public Functionality -- Pruneyard and American Federalism in the Shopping Mall -- Political Space and Welfare in a Californian Milieu -- A Myriad of Considerations -- Chapter 5: Toward a Second Chance for the First Amendment in Third Spaces1 -- The Unbearable Lightness of Pruneyard: Declined Invitations and Status Quo in the States -- New York versus New Jersey, or State Action Formalism versus Avant-Garde Public Functionalism.
Reimaging Property as Space in an Age of Fluctuating Fortunes: State Action, the New Urban Way -- Rainbow Suburbs and the Right to the Analogous City116 -- Notes -- References -- Table of Cases -- Index.
Examines how the Supreme Court has banished free expression from shopping malls and other public spaces.
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
There are no comments on this title.