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FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION 1950-Present.

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Presentation on theme: "FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION 1950-Present."— Presentation transcript:

1 FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION 1950-Present

2 TYPES Freedom of Assembly Freedom of Association Freedom of Movement
Freedom of Religion Freedom of Speech Freedom of the Press Freedom of Thought Freedom of Privacy Freedom of Bear Arms Suffrage Scientific Freedom Academic Freedom

3 TIMELINE Hate Neo-Nazi. Fascist. Nationalist.
1960 Hate Neo-Nazi. Fascist. Nationalist. Some of these groups closely adhered to the ideas propounded in Hitler's Mein Kampf. 1988 Banning prayers in schools. Sudbury Board of Education. These customs were authorized by Regulation 262, section 28(1) of the Education Act. 1989 Challenging Freedom of Expression. Quebec's Consumer Protection Act. Irwin Toy’s Marketing.

4 TIMELINE Testing the Limits of Freedom of Expression.
1990 Testing the Limits of Freedom of Expression. The Keegstra Case. Anti-Semitism. Unlawfully promoting hatred. 1996 The Right to Freedom from Discrimation. Malcolm Ross, a modified resource teacher. 2003 Banned books in libraries. Every country in the world has banned books. Before a book can be banned, it must be challenged.

5 Banning Prayers in School
Opened its day with the singing of "O Canada" and the reciting of the "Lord's Prayer." The prayer was either led by the classroom teacher or recited over the school's public address system. In some schools, passages from the bible were also read. Students from different religious faiths could be absent from school in order to observe religious holidays at their parents' request. In the end, schools would have to use less invasive ways of instilling educational and moral values.

6 Banned Books in Libraries
They banned books because being too sexually explicit or having offensive language. Some people charge that racism should be grounds for banning a particular work. Concerns about graphic violence can also put a book on the endangered reading list. Others decry promotion of counter-majority lifestyles, such as homosexuality. Some of the most famous examples of banned books include Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn, James Joyce’s Ulysses, and Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass. Banned Book Week runs every year from September 29 to Oct 1.

7 Sources


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