It’s not always easy to defend freedom. Public life may have been locked down recently, but it has been in bad health for some time.
Open debate has been suffocated by today’s censorious climate and there is little cultural support for freedom as a foundational value. What we need is rowdy, good-natured disagreement and people prepared to experiment with what freedom might mean today.
We stand on the shoulders of giants, but we shouldn’t be complacent. We can’t simply rely on the thinkers of the past to work out what liberty means today, and how to argue for it.
Drawing on the tradition of radical pamphlets from the seventeenth century onwards – designed to be argued over in the pub as much as parliament – Letters on Liberty promises to make you think twice. Each Letter stakes a claim for how to forge a freer society in the here and now.
We hope that, armed with these Letters, you take on the challenge of fighting for liberty.
ART AGAINST ORTHODOXYJJ Charlesworth
GROWING UP IN LOCKDOWNJennie Bristow
THE SOVEREIGN SUBJECTS OF HISTORYClaire Fox
FREEDOM IS NO ILLUSIONFrank Furedi
THE DANGERS OF THE NEW ANTI-RACISMAlka Sehgal Cuthbert
BEYOND THE CULTURE WARSJacob Reynolds