书城英文图书Speechless
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第1章 MORE ADVANCE PRAISE FOR SPEECHLESS

“Barry explains how we lose our freedom of speech every day when we go towork. This is a must-read for anyone who cares about free speech.”

—Lewis Maltby, President, The National Workrights Institute

“A generation of Americans growing up in the age of networking, blogging, and instant messaging will be surprised to learn they park most of their rights to free speech, expression, and association at the door of their workplace. Barry's thorough analysis demonstrates how out of touch this is with our democratic values and suggests reforms that would allow us to be both good citizens and loyal, productive workers. A very good book.”

—Thomas A. Kochan, George M. Bunker Professor of Management and Co-Director, MIT Workplace Center, and author of Restoring the American Dream: A Working Families' Agenda for America

“Bruce Barry documents in telling detail how workplace strictures on free expression can adversely affect morale, productivity, and profit. He argues persuasively that too often court rulings have helped enforce a management muzzle to a degree that the law has permitted the evolution of a corporate ethos that offends the political and cultural commitment to free speech in a democratic society.”

—John Seigenthaler, founding Editorial Director, USA Today; former President, The American Society of Newspaper Editors; and Founder, The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center

“Speechless is a new and important contribution to the literature on free speech. For over 200 years Americans have held onto the myth that unrestricted free expression is a right that should be and is respected and protected everywhere in our country. Barry has the audacity to bring into question that myth both theoretically and with a series of examples that challenge our ungrounded beliefs.”

—Patricia Werhane, Ruffin Professor of Business Ethics, University of Virginia; Wicklander Chair in Business Ethics and Director of the Institute for Business and Professional Ethics, DePaul University; author of Employment and Employee Rights and Moral Imagination and Management Decision-Making

“A pioneering, fresh, and thorough analysis of the subtle erosion of American expressive rights. Speechless concludes with a set of bold and sensible steps that legislatures, courts, managers, and workers can take to refashion workplace communities for putting America back on the track toward deliberative democracy.”

—Daniel B. Cornfield, Editor, Work and Occupations