This Article contends that contemporary arguments about the reporter\u27s privilege are increasingly situated within a divided framework in which protections for confidential and nonconfidential information are treated as separate interests that lack a shared theoretical justification. This is both a cause and consequence of a broader tendency among judges, legislators, journalists, and lawyers to emphasize policy-based conceptions of the privilege that are focused on case-specific calculations of harms and benefits, rather than principle-based conceptions focused on journalistic autonomy and the need for a structural separation of press and government. Policy arguments present the privilege as a narrow, utilitarian device for eliciting pub...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
This report briefly provides an overview of general trends among the states individual statutes
This Article contends that contemporary arguments about the reporter\u27s privilege are increasingly...
While the overwhelming majority of states have established constitutional, statutory, or common-law ...
The reporter’s privilege is under attack, and “pajama-clad bloggers” are largely to blame. Courts an...
Today, the statutory, common-law, and constitutional aspects of the long-dormant problem are being r...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Despite the increasing importance of the journalist in society, one controversy which has long been ...
This Note examines reporters\u27 claims to a First Amendment reporter-source privilege in light of F...
In the years since Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972), judicial protection of journalists\u27 c...
In 1999, North Carolina became the thirty-first state to enact a statute granting journalists a priv...
To date, thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have enacted shield laws that provide varyin...
Introduction The Basis for a Privilege The Current Law When Is the Public Benefited? When Should Thi...
The purpose of this comment is to determine whether the confidential associations and-or private com...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
This report briefly provides an overview of general trends among the states individual statutes
This Article contends that contemporary arguments about the reporter\u27s privilege are increasingly...
While the overwhelming majority of states have established constitutional, statutory, or common-law ...
The reporter’s privilege is under attack, and “pajama-clad bloggers” are largely to blame. Courts an...
Today, the statutory, common-law, and constitutional aspects of the long-dormant problem are being r...
Journalists often take the position that confidential sources should remain anonymous. One tool jour...
Despite the increasing importance of the journalist in society, one controversy which has long been ...
This Note examines reporters\u27 claims to a First Amendment reporter-source privilege in light of F...
In the years since Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665 (1972), judicial protection of journalists\u27 c...
In 1999, North Carolina became the thirty-first state to enact a statute granting journalists a priv...
To date, thirty-one states and the District of Columbia have enacted shield laws that provide varyin...
Introduction The Basis for a Privilege The Current Law When Is the Public Benefited? When Should Thi...
The purpose of this comment is to determine whether the confidential associations and-or private com...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
Forty years ago, in Branzburg v. Hayes, the Supreme Court made its first and only inquiry into the c...
This report briefly provides an overview of general trends among the states individual statutes