Some of our best and most influential constitutional scholars have recently revived the view that the essential objective of the First Amendment is to promote a rich and valuable public debate. Their claim is that First Amendment issues ought to be decided not by reference to ... personal autonomy, or the right of self-expression, but rather by reference to the Amendment\u27s positive purpose of creating an informed public capable of self-government. ) Because this understanding of the First Amendment subordinates individual rights of expression to collective processes of public deliberation, I shall call it the collectivist theory of the First Amendment. Moved by the disreputable state of contemporary democratic dialogue in America, p...
Should there be greater participation by legislators and citizens in constitutional debate, theory, ...
The standard account of the First Amendment presupposes that the Supreme Court has consistently expa...
It\u27s been a tough day. I\u27ve spent most of it worrying about the Free Speech Principle. Or at l...
Some of our best and most influential constitutional scholars have recently revived the view that th...
Some of our best and most influential constitutional scholars have recently revived the view that th...
The First Amendment guarantees that Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech ...
Deliberative constitutionalism is a theory that has arrived at the centre of the academic debate in ...
Over the past several decades, the Supreme Court and most First Amendment scholars have taken the po...
In an increasingly globalized marketplace of ideas, First Amendment law and theory must recognize th...
Political deliberation is a classic component of collective decision-making. It consists in forming...
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell is the most recent in a long line of first amendment decisions in which ...
First Amendment interests in both speech and religion often collide with one another. A political ac...
In the wake of Charlottesville, the rise of the alt-right, and campus controversies, the First Amend...
In this article, Professor Fleming proposes to tether the right of autonomy by grounding it within a...
The First Amendment unambiguously proclaims that “Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom...
Should there be greater participation by legislators and citizens in constitutional debate, theory, ...
The standard account of the First Amendment presupposes that the Supreme Court has consistently expa...
It\u27s been a tough day. I\u27ve spent most of it worrying about the Free Speech Principle. Or at l...
Some of our best and most influential constitutional scholars have recently revived the view that th...
Some of our best and most influential constitutional scholars have recently revived the view that th...
The First Amendment guarantees that Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech ...
Deliberative constitutionalism is a theory that has arrived at the centre of the academic debate in ...
Over the past several decades, the Supreme Court and most First Amendment scholars have taken the po...
In an increasingly globalized marketplace of ideas, First Amendment law and theory must recognize th...
Political deliberation is a classic component of collective decision-making. It consists in forming...
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell is the most recent in a long line of first amendment decisions in which ...
First Amendment interests in both speech and religion often collide with one another. A political ac...
In the wake of Charlottesville, the rise of the alt-right, and campus controversies, the First Amend...
In this article, Professor Fleming proposes to tether the right of autonomy by grounding it within a...
The First Amendment unambiguously proclaims that “Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom...
Should there be greater participation by legislators and citizens in constitutional debate, theory, ...
The standard account of the First Amendment presupposes that the Supreme Court has consistently expa...
It\u27s been a tough day. I\u27ve spent most of it worrying about the Free Speech Principle. Or at l...