This original and provocative book looks at an important
constitutional freedom that today is largely forgotten: the right
of assembly. While this right lay at the heart of some of the most
important social movements in American history--abolitionism,
women's suffrage, the labor and civil rights movements--courts now
prefer to speak about the freedoms of association and speech. But
the right of "expressive association" undermines protections for
groups whose purposes are demonstrable not by speech or expression
but through ways of being. John D. Inazu demonstrates that the
forgetting of assembly and the embrace of association lose sight of
important dimensions of our constitutional tradition.
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