When Sir Charles Sidlye exhibited himself nude on a balcony in 1663, he undoubtedly did not know his eccentric conduct would foreshadow what has become one of the most troublesome areas of constitutional law. The failure of the Supreme Court to provide clear constitutional guidelines for anti-obscenity legislation has occasioned confusion among state and federal authorities, has precipitated a flood of litigation burdening the Court with the task of reviewing a mass of sexually explicit materials to determine what is and is not obscene, and has engendered widespread criticism of the Court\u27s policy in this area of law
Although the winds of change have created some ripples, the ancient crime of sodomy remains on the b...
“In its latest attempt to define a workable standard for obscenity rulings, the United States Suprem...
Commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s use of the two-level theory of speech to place...
Ohio\u27s new obscenity statutes enacted in 1972 and made effective on January 1, 1974 are interesti...
The first portion of this article examines obscenity regulation both in the federal arena and in Nor...
According to the opinion of Mr. Justice Brennan in Jacobellis v. Ohio, the Supreme Court itself must...
North Carolina, like other states, has chosen to regulate the dissemination of obscenity through a n...
The purpose of this Article is to examine critically the rationale of those decisions and to assess ...
Criminal penalties are increasingly perceived to be too severe for regulating obscenity. Professor R...
I. Introduction II. The First Amendment and Governmental Power to Repress Speech III. The Old Argume...
Since 1957, the United States Supreme Court has exhibited a marked shift in its attitude toward free...
This note re-examines government regulation of obscene material in the light of the first amendment ...
Near the end of the 1970-71 term, the Supreme Court considered two cases, United States v. Reidell a...
This Article analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s approach to obscenity. The author suggests that, during...
Includes bibliographical references.Heard by the Supreme Court in late 1965, Ginzburg v. United Stat...
Although the winds of change have created some ripples, the ancient crime of sodomy remains on the b...
“In its latest attempt to define a workable standard for obscenity rulings, the United States Suprem...
Commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s use of the two-level theory of speech to place...
Ohio\u27s new obscenity statutes enacted in 1972 and made effective on January 1, 1974 are interesti...
The first portion of this article examines obscenity regulation both in the federal arena and in Nor...
According to the opinion of Mr. Justice Brennan in Jacobellis v. Ohio, the Supreme Court itself must...
North Carolina, like other states, has chosen to regulate the dissemination of obscenity through a n...
The purpose of this Article is to examine critically the rationale of those decisions and to assess ...
Criminal penalties are increasingly perceived to be too severe for regulating obscenity. Professor R...
I. Introduction II. The First Amendment and Governmental Power to Repress Speech III. The Old Argume...
Since 1957, the United States Supreme Court has exhibited a marked shift in its attitude toward free...
This note re-examines government regulation of obscene material in the light of the first amendment ...
Near the end of the 1970-71 term, the Supreme Court considered two cases, United States v. Reidell a...
This Article analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s approach to obscenity. The author suggests that, during...
Includes bibliographical references.Heard by the Supreme Court in late 1965, Ginzburg v. United Stat...
Although the winds of change have created some ripples, the ancient crime of sodomy remains on the b...
“In its latest attempt to define a workable standard for obscenity rulings, the United States Suprem...
Commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s use of the two-level theory of speech to place...