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21 - Interview with Theodore Shaw

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Michael Herz
Affiliation:
Cardozo School of Law
Peter Molnar
Affiliation:
Center for Media and Communications, Central European University, Budapest
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Summary

  1. Peter Molnar: You have had extensive experience litigating civil rights cases. Let’s begin with some questions about the ways, if any, in which free-speech protections that cover even “hate speech” might have affected your litigating efforts. Do you think the way “hate speech” is “free” in the United States made it harder for you to litigate discrimination and segregation in any way?

  2. Theodore Shaw: In fact, nothing comes to mind. Thinking over the many school desegregation cases I’ve litigated, the Voting Rights litigation, a capital punishment case I did in Louisiana many years ago, the housing discrimination cases that I’ve done – I’d have to struggle to think of an example of how constitutionally protected hate speech really interfered with my ability to litigate cases. My answer would have to be right now, “No.”

That does not mean that I have not been exposed to hate speech in my work. For example, I’ve done many school desegregation cases, and I took it for granted that some of the opponents to school desegregation would say hateful things. And they did. I remember being at the Justice Department early in my career, and we would have to respond to citizen mail. Some of the mail that came in criticizing the school desegregation cases we filed was very racist and hateful. But I can't say that that really got in the way of the actual litigation of the cases.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Content and Context of Hate Speech
Rethinking Regulation and Responses
, pp. 399 - 414
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Bolt, RobertA Man for All SeasonsVintage Books 1962Google Scholar
Bollinger, Grutter v. 2003
Nordheimer, Jon 1993
Salzman, JackIntroductionStruggles in the Promised Land: Towards a History of Black-Jewish Relations in the United StatesOxford University Press 1997Google Scholar
Jones, Elaine R. 1994
Lawrence, Charles R.If He Hollers Let Him Go: Regulating Racist Speech on Campus 1990 Duke L.J 431 439Google Scholar
1812
Douglass, FrederickThe Life and Times of Frederick DouglassDeWolfe & Fiske Co 1892Google Scholar

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