Because of the recent focus on television violence, it is more a question of when, rather than if, Congress will take action on this issue. Safe harbor regulation, or restricting violent programming to certain hours of the day, is one form of regulation that is recurrently suggested as a means for dealing with the potential ills created by television violence. The possibility of such regulation implicates numerous constitutional issues. This Article addresses whether safe harbor regulation of television violence is feasible without violating the First Amendment and other provisions of the Constitution
Society is increasingly inclined to hold publishers and producers responsible for the violent acts o...
This article focuses on the question of whether state-imposed public access requirements violate the...
The issues of access and cable television regulation pose serious constitutional questions. This art...
Because of the recent focus on television violence, it is more a question of when, rather than if...
During periods of concern about the content of television programming, Congress often threatens to l...
This chapter examines whether speech containing violent imagery that is made available to children c...
The Television Violence Act of 1990 is designed to encourage the networks, the cable industry, and i...
This paper was awarded First Place in the Central States Communication Association 1996 State Journa...
Family values has become a familiar phrase in all arenas of American life. As a result of the incre...
With the expansion of cable and free-air subscription television into more markets, interstate trans...
In the modem world of newsmedia, the lines between informative news and gratuitous entertainment hav...
This paper is adapted from a talk given by the author at Duke University School of Law on April 6, 2...
On Thursday, September 20, 1973, from 9:00 p.m. to 11:15 p.m., the Columbia Broadcasting System pres...
A group of minors allegedly attacked a nine-year-old girl at a San Francisco beach and artificially...
Violent video games have drawn the ire of parents and commentators alike ever since their inception ...
Society is increasingly inclined to hold publishers and producers responsible for the violent acts o...
This article focuses on the question of whether state-imposed public access requirements violate the...
The issues of access and cable television regulation pose serious constitutional questions. This art...
Because of the recent focus on television violence, it is more a question of when, rather than if...
During periods of concern about the content of television programming, Congress often threatens to l...
This chapter examines whether speech containing violent imagery that is made available to children c...
The Television Violence Act of 1990 is designed to encourage the networks, the cable industry, and i...
This paper was awarded First Place in the Central States Communication Association 1996 State Journa...
Family values has become a familiar phrase in all arenas of American life. As a result of the incre...
With the expansion of cable and free-air subscription television into more markets, interstate trans...
In the modem world of newsmedia, the lines between informative news and gratuitous entertainment hav...
This paper is adapted from a talk given by the author at Duke University School of Law on April 6, 2...
On Thursday, September 20, 1973, from 9:00 p.m. to 11:15 p.m., the Columbia Broadcasting System pres...
A group of minors allegedly attacked a nine-year-old girl at a San Francisco beach and artificially...
Violent video games have drawn the ire of parents and commentators alike ever since their inception ...
Society is increasingly inclined to hold publishers and producers responsible for the violent acts o...
This article focuses on the question of whether state-imposed public access requirements violate the...
The issues of access and cable television regulation pose serious constitutional questions. This art...