TY - BOOK AU - Barry,Bruce TI - Speechless: the erosion of free expression in the American workplace T2 - A BK currents book SN - 9781576755174 AV - JC599.U5 B29 2007eb U1 - 323.44/30973 22 PY - 2007/// CY - San Francisco PB - Berrett-Koehler Publishers KW - Freedom of speech KW - United States KW - Communication in organizations KW - Liberté d'expression KW - États-Unis KW - Communication dans les organisations KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE KW - Political Freedom & Security KW - Civil Rights KW - bisacsh KW - Human Rights KW - SOCIAL SCIENCE KW - Sociology KW - General KW - BUSINESS & ECONOMICS KW - Business Communication KW - fast KW - Electronic books N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-275) and index; Introduction; Speechless at work in America --; 1; When work and speech collide --; 2; Constitutional rights in public and private --; 3; Unemployment at will --; 4; Public employee speech --; 5; A chill in the private sector --; 6; Why free speech works --; 7; Civil rights and wrongs --; 8; Speech in the digital age --; 9; Managing expression inside the workplace --; Conclusion; The case for freer expression --; Acknowledgments --; Notes --; Index --; About the author; Electronic reproduction; [Place of publication not identified]; HathiTrust Digital Library; 2010 N2 - A factory worker is fired because her boss disagrees with her political bumper sticker. A stockbroker feels pressure to resign from an employer who disapproves of his off-hours political advocacy. A flight attendant is grounded because her airline doesn't like what she's writing in her personal blog. Is it legal to fire people for speech that makes employers uncomfortable, even if the content has little or nothing to do with their job or workplace? For most American workers, the alarming answer is yes. Speechless takes on the state of free expression in the American workplace, exploring its history, explaining how and why Americans have come to take freedom of speech for granted, and demonstrating how employers can legally punish employees for speaking their minds. Bruce Barry shows how constitutional law erects formidable barriers to free speech in workplaces, while employment law gives employers wide latitude to suppress speech with impunity--even speech that is unrelated to the job or the company. Employers, with rights of property ownership over not just what they manage but how they manage, can decide just how much employee speech they will tolerate. Workers have little choice but to accept conditions of employment or go elsewhere. Barry argues that a toxic combination of law, conventional economic wisdom, and accepted managerial practice has created an American workplace in which freedom of speech--that most crucial of civil liberties in a healthy democracy--is something you do after work, on your own time, and even then (for many), only if your employer approves. Barry proposes changes both to the law and to management practice that would expand employees' expressive rights without jeopardizing the legitimate interests of employers. In defense of freer speech in and around the workplace, Barry argues that a healthy democracy depends in part on the experience of liberty at work. Workplaces are key venues for shared experience and public discourse, so workplace speech rights matter deeply for advancing citizenship, community, and democracy in a free society UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=260665 ER -