Freedom of AssociationAmy Gutmann Princeton University Press, 1998 M08 23 - 382 pages Americans are joiners. They are members of churches, fraternal and sororal orders, sports leagues, community centers, parent-teacher associations, professional associations, residential associations, literary societies, national and international charities, and service organizations of seemingly all sorts. Social scientists are engaged in a lively argument about whether decreasing proportions of Americans over the past several decades have been joining secondary associations, but no one disputes that freedom of association remains a fundamental personal and political value in the United States. "Nothing," Alexis de Tocqueville argued, "deserves more attention." Yet the value and limits of free association in the United States have not received the attention they deserve. Why is freedom of association valuable for the lives of individuals? What does it contribute to the life of a liberal democracy? This volume explores the individual and civic values of associational freedom in a liberal democracy, as well as the moral and constitutional limits of claims to associational freedom. |
Contents
Freedom of Association An Introductory Essay | 3 |
The Value of Association | 35 |
On Involuntary Association | 64 |
Compelled Association Public Standing SelfRespect and the Dynamic of Exclusion | 75 |
Freedom of Association and Religious Association | 109 |
Rights Reasons and Freedom of Association | 145 |
Ethnic Associations and Democratic Citizenship | 177 |
Revisiting the Civic Sphere | 214 |