Taking Liberties: National Barriers to the Free Flow of Ideas
Among the specific topics Hull addresses are Supreme Court rulings on the rights of noncitizens, the enactment of the McCarran-Walter Immigration Act and its effects in the 1980s, the handling of classified information and assessments by the American Bar Association, and restrictions on the press. She concludes that policies that act to restrict Americans' access to international sources of information jeopardize national welfare because almost every significant problem confronting Americans today--from drugs to the deficit--is global in character. Throughout her work, Hull defines the relevant constitutional issues and discusses legal cases within a larger social and political context. Ample explanatory information is provided for the reader who lacks an extensive legal background. |
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at least insofar as the exercise of these rights affects U.S. citizens , is consequently less likely to come from the judiciary than from Congress , where a decades - long effort to amend the McCarran Act may yet prove successful . a ...
132 Thus , travel may be restricted , but such restrictions must be authorized by Congress , not by some unaccountable bureaucrat . Such authorization need not be explicit , however , provided that Congress is aware of and acquiesces in ...
100th Congress , 1st Sess . , H. Report No. 100_433 and S. Report No. 100–216 ( November 1987 ) . United States Congress . House Committee on Science and Technology . Hearings before the Subcommittee on Science , Research and Technology ...