CHAPTER FOUR
Fundamental American Liberties
Study
Civil
liberties
and civil rights define the powers
that we as citizens have in a democratic polity. Our civil liberties are
individual freedoms that place limitations on the power of government. Most of
these rights are spelled out in the text of the Constitution--for instance,
that government may not suspend habeas
corpus or pass bills of attainder
or ex post facto laws--or in its
first ten amendments, the Bill of Rights. But some rights have developed over
the years through judicial decision making. The rights in the Bill of Rights
limit only the national government’s action, but through a process of incorporation--specifically selective incorporation--the Supreme
Court has made some of them applicable to the states.
According to the establishment clause and free
exercise clause of the First Amendment, citizens of the United States
have the right not to be coerced to practice a religion in which they do not
believe, as well as the right not to be prevented from practicing the religion
they espouse. Because these rights can conflict, separationists and accommodationists
have fought over the meaning of religious freedom since the founding. The
courts have played a significant role in navigating the stormy waters of
religious expression since then, applying the Lemon test to determine whether government is
entangled with religion, and using the compelling
state interest test to see if laws affecting religion go beyond the
legitimate use of the government’s police
power.
Freedom of expression, also provided for in
the First Amendment, is often considered the hallmark of our democratic
government. Freedom of expression and freedom
of assembly help limit corruption, protect minorities, and promote a
vigorous defense of the truth. Again, it has been left to the courts to balance
freedom of expression with social and moral order, for instance by applying the
clear and present danger test and
the imminent lawless action test to
see if sedition laws restrict speech
unconstitutionally, and by applying the Miller test to determine what is obscene. The Court has allowed the
regulation of some speech, such as fighting
words, although it has been reluctant to follow codes of political correctness, to allow prior restraint, or to ease the laws of
libel.
The right to bear arms, supported by the
Second Amendment, has also been hotly debated. Most often the debate over gun
laws is carried out in state legislatures.
The founders believed that to limit government
power, people needed to retain due
process of the law throughout the process of being accused, tried, and
punished for criminal activities. Thus they devoted some of the text of the
Constitution as well as the Bill of Rights to a variety of procedural
protections, including the right to a speedy and public trial, protection from
unreasonable search and seizure--including the judge-made exclusionary rule--and the right to legal advice.
Though the right to privacy is not mentioned in either the Constitution or the
Bill of Rights--and did not even enter the American legal system until the late
1800s--it has become a fiercely debated right on a number of levels, including
reproductive rights, gay rights, and the right to die.
Learning
Objectives
After reading this chapter, you should
understand
- the meaning of
rights in a democratic society
- the Bill of
Rights as part of the federal Constitution and its relationship to the
states
- several
specific rights that it details--freedom of religion, speech, and the
press; the right to bear arms; the rights of people accused of crimes, and
the right to privacy
Materials developed by Matthew J. Streb,
Northern Illinois University
|