This Essay asks: is every tweet from a professor protected as a form of academic freedom by the First Amendment? Professor Salaita’s watershed case poses sharply conflicting positions on academic freedom for faculty members. In support of Professor Salaita, a faculty committee at the University of Illinois asserts: “Regardless of the tweets’ tone and content, they are political speech—part of the robust free play of ideas in the political realm that the [University] Statutes insulate from institutional sanction, even in the case of ideas we may detest.” To answer my research question, I explore how courts rule on First Amendment claims by faculty members who have been disciplined or lost their jobs for speech that their school considered to...
In recent years, the academic community has become increasingly engaged with social media. While the...
College professors and students are increasingly relying on social networking sites to make connecti...
This paper considers the constitutional questions posed by trigger warnings in higher education. Spe...
This Essay asks: is every tweet from a professor protected as a form of academic freedom by the Firs...
The idea of a constitutionally protected realm of academic freedom is controversial and judicially u...
The question of whether the First Amendment protects the individual academic freedom of faculty memb...
The events of recent years have caused increased concern over the First Amendment free speech rights...
Against a backdrop of national political turmoil, universities have experienced volatile reactions f...
(Excerpt) Using the decisions in Keefe, Oyama and Tatro as analytical springboards, this Article exa...
The First Amendment is one of the most important amendments that protects democracy. The First Amend...
Academic freedom, a coveted feature of higher education, is the concept that faculty should be free ...
In Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006), the Supreme Court held that statements made pursuant t...
Our Nation is deeply committed to safeguarding academic freedom, which is of transcendent value to a...
College professors and students are increasingly relying on social networking sites to make connecti...
This manuscript highlights many of the Supreme Court cases involving the First Amendment and the ori...
In recent years, the academic community has become increasingly engaged with social media. While the...
College professors and students are increasingly relying on social networking sites to make connecti...
This paper considers the constitutional questions posed by trigger warnings in higher education. Spe...
This Essay asks: is every tweet from a professor protected as a form of academic freedom by the Firs...
The idea of a constitutionally protected realm of academic freedom is controversial and judicially u...
The question of whether the First Amendment protects the individual academic freedom of faculty memb...
The events of recent years have caused increased concern over the First Amendment free speech rights...
Against a backdrop of national political turmoil, universities have experienced volatile reactions f...
(Excerpt) Using the decisions in Keefe, Oyama and Tatro as analytical springboards, this Article exa...
The First Amendment is one of the most important amendments that protects democracy. The First Amend...
Academic freedom, a coveted feature of higher education, is the concept that faculty should be free ...
In Garcetti v. Ceballos, 547 U.S. 410 (2006), the Supreme Court held that statements made pursuant t...
Our Nation is deeply committed to safeguarding academic freedom, which is of transcendent value to a...
College professors and students are increasingly relying on social networking sites to make connecti...
This manuscript highlights many of the Supreme Court cases involving the First Amendment and the ori...
In recent years, the academic community has become increasingly engaged with social media. While the...
College professors and students are increasingly relying on social networking sites to make connecti...
This paper considers the constitutional questions posed by trigger warnings in higher education. Spe...