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Full Description
This book examines the legal and ethical issues that can result when employees express opinions that conflict with those of their employer. It covers seven areas of employment - corporate; government (local, state, and federal); military; law enforcement; K-12 education; college professors and administrators; and sports - to look at case precedent and interrogate how technology has complicated this area of the law and employee-employer relations. Randy Bobbitt argues that, while free speech in the workplace has always been considered controversial, the phenomena of social media has coincided with a sharp increase in cases over the past decade, as disgruntled employees take to online forums to criticize their employers or express controversial opinions. By exploring these cases in both the private and public sectors, Bobbitt also highlights the difference in legal obligation to the protection of free speech between the two and demonstrates how employers in both sectors deviate from these obligations in certain cases. Scholars of communication, media law, labor law, US policy, history, and the first amendment will find this book of particular interest.
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1: Legal Framework: The First Amendment, Whistleblowing, and Unionization
Chapter 2: Social Media and the Twenty-First Century Watercooler
Chapter 3: Free Speech in Corporate America: Robust Discussion vs. Office Harmony
Chapter 4: Free Speech for Government Employees: Public Concern vs. Personal Grievances
Chapter 5: Free Speech in the Military: Personal Expression vs. the Doctrine of Military Necessity
Chapter 6: Free Speech for First Responders: Personal Expression vs. Public Confidence
Chapter 7: Free Speech for K-12 Educators: Political Participation vs. Political and Legal Considerations
Chapter 8: Free Speech for College Educators: Academic Freedom vs. Political and Legal Considerations
Chapter 9: Free Speech in Sports: Fan Engagement vs. Locker Room Harmony
References
About the Author