The article considers both the constitutional and statutory aspects of the regulation of indecency in political broadcasting. The discussion is limited to considering indecency, a term excluding obscenity or incitement to violence, because the government\u27s power to regulate these types of speech is well established. Indecent speech would be protected if used in the print media, since it does not fall within the established First Amendment exceptions. The basic constitutional question, therefore, is whether the broadcast media are inherently different from the print media, so as to justify different treatment of indecent political speech. This article will contend that they are not inherently different
With the expansion of cable and free-air subscription television into more markets, interstate trans...
Section 315(a) of the Communications Act--the anti-censorship provision--allows for the presentation...
This article contends that the public is deprived of an important source of information on public af...
The article considers both the constitutional and statutory aspects of the regulation of indecency i...
This article is both timely and beneficial to the legal profession in its analysis of the Federal Co...
This cutting-edge book treats broadcast indecency as a social phenomenon challenging the policy appr...
This Article attempts to illustrate how media entertainment speech currently possesses a constitutio...
The issue of broadcast indecency is a significant one for media organizations because it goes to the...
This paper is adapted from a talk given by the author at Duke University School of Law on April 6, 2...
Using an airing of the Victoria Secret fashion show as an example, the author explores the definitio...
This Note explores the relevant law regarding the issue of indecency and obscenity in broadcast, wit...
For a long time the Supreme Court of the United States has assumed that the government has a compell...
This article examines the United States' enforcement of indecency norms in the broadcast arena to di...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
Congress has empowered the Federal Communications Commission to regulate obscene, indecent, or pro...
With the expansion of cable and free-air subscription television into more markets, interstate trans...
Section 315(a) of the Communications Act--the anti-censorship provision--allows for the presentation...
This article contends that the public is deprived of an important source of information on public af...
The article considers both the constitutional and statutory aspects of the regulation of indecency i...
This article is both timely and beneficial to the legal profession in its analysis of the Federal Co...
This cutting-edge book treats broadcast indecency as a social phenomenon challenging the policy appr...
This Article attempts to illustrate how media entertainment speech currently possesses a constitutio...
The issue of broadcast indecency is a significant one for media organizations because it goes to the...
This paper is adapted from a talk given by the author at Duke University School of Law on April 6, 2...
Using an airing of the Victoria Secret fashion show as an example, the author explores the definitio...
This Note explores the relevant law regarding the issue of indecency and obscenity in broadcast, wit...
For a long time the Supreme Court of the United States has assumed that the government has a compell...
This article examines the United States' enforcement of indecency norms in the broadcast arena to di...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
Congress has empowered the Federal Communications Commission to regulate obscene, indecent, or pro...
With the expansion of cable and free-air subscription television into more markets, interstate trans...
Section 315(a) of the Communications Act--the anti-censorship provision--allows for the presentation...
This article contends that the public is deprived of an important source of information on public af...