Free Speech in the American Workplace: From the Dawn of Workers' Rights to the Rise of Social Media
By (Author) Randy Bobbitt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
7th August 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Employment and labour law: general
Political ideologies and movements
342.730853
Hardback
344
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This book examines the legal and ethical issues that can result when employees express opinions that conflict with those of their employer. It covers seven areas of employment - corporate; government (local, state, and federal); military; law enforcement; K-12 education; college professors and administrators; and sports - to look at case precedent and interrogate how technology has complicated this area of the law and employee-employer relations. Randy Bobbitt argues that, while free speech in the workplace has always been considered controversial, the phenomena of social media has coincided with a sharp increase in cases over the past decade, as disgruntled employees take to online forums to criticize their employers or express controversial opinions. By exploring these cases in both the private and public sectors, Bobbitt also highlights the difference in legal obligation to the protection of free speech between the two and demonstrates how employers in both sectors deviate from these obligations in certain cases. Scholars of communication, media law, labor law, US policy, history, and the first amendment will find this book of particular interest.
Randy Bobbitt pulls together fascinating legal and management history to produce an informed contemporary take on freedom of expression in and around the workplace. This is a lucid and well-sourced account of how workers free speech rights are precarious and quite variable, depending on where and how you work. Especially engaging are chapters exploring particular contexts the free speech landscape for those in military service, first responders, educators, and professional athletes. * Bruce Barry, Professor, Vanderbilt University, USA, and Author of Speechless: The Erosion of Free Expression in the American Workplace (2007) *
Randy Bobbitt is an independent researcher and holds a PhD in communication law and policy from Bowling Green State University. His previous books include Controversial Books in K-12 Classrooms and Libraries: Challenged, Censored, and Banned (2019); Free Speech on America's K-12 and College Campuses: Legal Cases from Barnette to Blaine (2016); Us against Them: The Political Culture of Talk Radio (2010); and Lottery Wars: Case Studies in Bible Belt Politics, 1986-2005 (2007), all published by Lexington Books.