This Article presents a multifactoral approach to free speech analysis. Difficult cases present a variety of challenges that require judges to weigh concerns for the protection of robust dialogue, especially about public issues, against concerns that sound in common law (such as reputation), statutory law (such as repose against harassment), and in constitutional law (such as copyright). Even when speech is implicated, the Court should aim to resolve other relevant individual and social issues arising from litigation. Focusing only on free speech categories is likely to discount substantial, and sometimes compelling, social concerns warranting reflection, analysis, and application. Examining the breadth of issues surrounding disputes with c...
In this Essay, Professor Alexander examines the First Amendment status of laws regulating the noncom...
The most fundamental problem in free speech law is not whether to protect the speech in question. Ra...
Contemporary free speech law is typically misfocused. This misfocus serves neither the purposes unde...
This Article presents a multifactoral approach to free speech analysis. Difficult cases present a va...
This Article documents the unnecessary complexity of the judicial formulations most frequently used...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
Abstract Those familiar with free speech jurisprudence know it as a complicated, contradictory, and ...
(Excerpt) In Part I of this Article, we set out some of the most commonly used tests and doctrines i...
A longstanding mystery of constitutional law concerns how the Free Speech Clause interacts with “gen...
For decades, constitutional doctrine has held that the Constitution\u27s guarantee of freedom of spe...
Freedom of speech occupies a special place in American society. But what counts as “speech” is a con...
This article contends that the Roberts Court, in the period from 2006 to 2016, arguably became the m...
The application of First Amendment doctrine to cases involving expressive liberties of lawyers and j...
What this Article shall refer to as the "commensurability debate," a debate carried out with great ...
To date no one has discovered a set of organizing principles for free speech doctrine, an area of th...
In this Essay, Professor Alexander examines the First Amendment status of laws regulating the noncom...
The most fundamental problem in free speech law is not whether to protect the speech in question. Ra...
Contemporary free speech law is typically misfocused. This misfocus serves neither the purposes unde...
This Article presents a multifactoral approach to free speech analysis. Difficult cases present a va...
This Article documents the unnecessary complexity of the judicial formulations most frequently used...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
Abstract Those familiar with free speech jurisprudence know it as a complicated, contradictory, and ...
(Excerpt) In Part I of this Article, we set out some of the most commonly used tests and doctrines i...
A longstanding mystery of constitutional law concerns how the Free Speech Clause interacts with “gen...
For decades, constitutional doctrine has held that the Constitution\u27s guarantee of freedom of spe...
Freedom of speech occupies a special place in American society. But what counts as “speech” is a con...
This article contends that the Roberts Court, in the period from 2006 to 2016, arguably became the m...
The application of First Amendment doctrine to cases involving expressive liberties of lawyers and j...
What this Article shall refer to as the "commensurability debate," a debate carried out with great ...
To date no one has discovered a set of organizing principles for free speech doctrine, an area of th...
In this Essay, Professor Alexander examines the First Amendment status of laws regulating the noncom...
The most fundamental problem in free speech law is not whether to protect the speech in question. Ra...
Contemporary free speech law is typically misfocused. This misfocus serves neither the purposes unde...