This Note discusses the current state of the first amendment with regard to access of the press to state prisons. Huber analyses the restrictions many prisons impose upon reporters in light of what happened to Kalief Browder, a boy confined for three years without a trial, who faced brutal violence by guards and two years of solitary confinement, in connection with stealing a backpack. The Article notes how journalistic efforts highlighted Browder’s mistreatment only after he tragically took his life. The author traces the current state of law governing media access to policies, including state-specific studies of current attempts to access prisons and failed legislative measures. The author concludes that these types of restrictions are un...
This article examines how the development and status of the rights of incarcerated people is signifi...
In the current flux of an increasingly punitive juvenile justice system, one of the system\u27s grea...
A plethora of evidence confirms that America continues to lead the world in imprisonment. No serious...
(Excerpt) This Article proceeds in three Parts. Part I describes the deferential Turner standard tha...
This Article examines one part of the legal regime administering mass incarceration that has not b...
This Article discusses whether inmates have a First Amendment interest in receiving unsolicited publ...
Without access to information, the press cannot do its job serving the public. Although the First Am...
On August 1, 2006, a federal district judge sent Josh Wolf, a freelance video journalist and blogger...
In a time when more and more criminal trials are saturated in news coverage, media outlets race to g...
Although United States history is replete with struggles over the rights and prerogatives of the pre...
Although the U.S. Supreme Court in Florida Star v. B.J.F., 491 U.S. 524 (1989), upheld press rights ...
A sentence to prision invovles much more than simple incarceration and its attendant withdrawal of f...
This casenote examines the recent decision of Houchins v. KQED; Inc., in which the Supreme Court of ...
This Article looks at the enactment and subsequent nullification of a 1992 Washington law that state...
On the twenty-fifth anniversary of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Turner v. Safley, t...
This article examines how the development and status of the rights of incarcerated people is signifi...
In the current flux of an increasingly punitive juvenile justice system, one of the system\u27s grea...
A plethora of evidence confirms that America continues to lead the world in imprisonment. No serious...
(Excerpt) This Article proceeds in three Parts. Part I describes the deferential Turner standard tha...
This Article examines one part of the legal regime administering mass incarceration that has not b...
This Article discusses whether inmates have a First Amendment interest in receiving unsolicited publ...
Without access to information, the press cannot do its job serving the public. Although the First Am...
On August 1, 2006, a federal district judge sent Josh Wolf, a freelance video journalist and blogger...
In a time when more and more criminal trials are saturated in news coverage, media outlets race to g...
Although United States history is replete with struggles over the rights and prerogatives of the pre...
Although the U.S. Supreme Court in Florida Star v. B.J.F., 491 U.S. 524 (1989), upheld press rights ...
A sentence to prision invovles much more than simple incarceration and its attendant withdrawal of f...
This casenote examines the recent decision of Houchins v. KQED; Inc., in which the Supreme Court of ...
This Article looks at the enactment and subsequent nullification of a 1992 Washington law that state...
On the twenty-fifth anniversary of the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Turner v. Safley, t...
This article examines how the development and status of the rights of incarcerated people is signifi...
In the current flux of an increasingly punitive juvenile justice system, one of the system\u27s grea...
A plethora of evidence confirms that America continues to lead the world in imprisonment. No serious...