In July 2004, a federal district court struck down, on First Amendment grounds, a Washington state law that restricted minors\u27 access to video games containing “realistic or photographic-like depictions of aggressive conflict in which the player kills, injures, or otherwise causes physical harm to a human form in the game who is depicted, by dress or other recognizable symbols, as a public law enforcement officer.” The decision was anything but surprising. It followed in the footsteps of recent opinions issued by two federal appellate courts that held unconstitutional similar legislation regulating minors\u27 access to fictional images of violence in video games. In summary, then, there is a laundry list of reasons why legislative bodies...
Video games are currently regulated in North America through an independent organization, the Entert...
As the professor on the panel, I feel that I should start by putting our subject into a bit of conte...
In the wake of the perverse pattern of horrifying schoolyard shootings in Littleton, Colorado, and i...
In July 2004, a federal district court struck down, on First Amendment grounds, a Washington state l...
Are violent video games harming America’s youth? Is it possible a series of interconnected circuit b...
Historically, children have been exposed to violence by authors and directors who have depicted viol...
Violent video games have drawn the ire of parents and commentators alike ever since their inception ...
Though the depiction of minors engaged in obscene or sexual acts has been heavily criminalized, mode...
As early as 1976, video games started to incorporate aspects of violence, such as striking enemies w...
Video games will turn 30 years old in 2002. The industry that started with Pong has become a multi-b...
Juliet DeeThe First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees free speech except in extreme cases. Wh...
In 2011, in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, the Supreme Court declared unconstitutiona...
The U.S. Supreme Court holds that obscenity warrants no First Amendment protection whereas violent s...
Video games, like motion pictures, failed to qualify for First Amendment protection until well after...
Society is increasingly inclined to hold publishers and producers responsible for the violent acts o...
Video games are currently regulated in North America through an independent organization, the Entert...
As the professor on the panel, I feel that I should start by putting our subject into a bit of conte...
In the wake of the perverse pattern of horrifying schoolyard shootings in Littleton, Colorado, and i...
In July 2004, a federal district court struck down, on First Amendment grounds, a Washington state l...
Are violent video games harming America’s youth? Is it possible a series of interconnected circuit b...
Historically, children have been exposed to violence by authors and directors who have depicted viol...
Violent video games have drawn the ire of parents and commentators alike ever since their inception ...
Though the depiction of minors engaged in obscene or sexual acts has been heavily criminalized, mode...
As early as 1976, video games started to incorporate aspects of violence, such as striking enemies w...
Video games will turn 30 years old in 2002. The industry that started with Pong has become a multi-b...
Juliet DeeThe First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees free speech except in extreme cases. Wh...
In 2011, in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, the Supreme Court declared unconstitutiona...
The U.S. Supreme Court holds that obscenity warrants no First Amendment protection whereas violent s...
Video games, like motion pictures, failed to qualify for First Amendment protection until well after...
Society is increasingly inclined to hold publishers and producers responsible for the violent acts o...
Video games are currently regulated in North America through an independent organization, the Entert...
As the professor on the panel, I feel that I should start by putting our subject into a bit of conte...
In the wake of the perverse pattern of horrifying schoolyard shootings in Littleton, Colorado, and i...