Constitutional protection of public employee speech has been declining for the past forty years, yet the reason for the decline has remained elusive. This Article puts forward a novel theory situating public employee speech in larger structural transformations in governmental organization. It identifies a “public/private convergence,” the main feature of which is that public officials are increasingly viewed as private employees, resulting in a significant erosion of their free speech rights. This erosion is exacerbated by rising levels of privatization and civil service reforms exhibiting the same mode of thought: that public employees are no different from private employees. These trends have far reaching First Amendment implications that...
Public employees do not enjoy the same free speech rights under the First Amendment as do ordinary c...
The Court’s jurisprudence with public employee speech rights leaves unclear what standard applies in...
More than 20 million Americans work for federal, state or local governments. Sometimes these employe...
Constitutional protection of public employee speech has been declining for the past forty years, yet...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment Of public employees\u27 First ...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
The question of the scope of public employee free speech rights is of obvious importance. Such cases...
More than four decades have passed since the U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the First Amendment r...
The First Amendment is ordinarily thought to prohibit content or viewpoint discrimination. Yet publi...
We have a First Amendment right to criticize the government. But this freedom does not translate int...
This Article is not about theories of free speech and how they bear on the public employment context...
In this article, I use the 2014 decision of Lane v. Franks as a jumping off point to revisit the rul...
This essay, to be published in the First Amendment Law Review\u27s forthcoming symposium issue on Pu...
Although scholars offer a variety of explanations for the modern Supreme Court’s public employee spe...
Privatization is the public sector analogue of the runaway shop. In the private sector, the increa...
Public employees do not enjoy the same free speech rights under the First Amendment as do ordinary c...
The Court’s jurisprudence with public employee speech rights leaves unclear what standard applies in...
More than 20 million Americans work for federal, state or local governments. Sometimes these employe...
Constitutional protection of public employee speech has been declining for the past forty years, yet...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment Of public employees\u27 First ...
This Article identifies a key doctrinal shift in courts\u27 treatment of public employees\u27 First ...
The question of the scope of public employee free speech rights is of obvious importance. Such cases...
More than four decades have passed since the U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the First Amendment r...
The First Amendment is ordinarily thought to prohibit content or viewpoint discrimination. Yet publi...
We have a First Amendment right to criticize the government. But this freedom does not translate int...
This Article is not about theories of free speech and how they bear on the public employment context...
In this article, I use the 2014 decision of Lane v. Franks as a jumping off point to revisit the rul...
This essay, to be published in the First Amendment Law Review\u27s forthcoming symposium issue on Pu...
Although scholars offer a variety of explanations for the modern Supreme Court’s public employee spe...
Privatization is the public sector analogue of the runaway shop. In the private sector, the increa...
Public employees do not enjoy the same free speech rights under the First Amendment as do ordinary c...
The Court’s jurisprudence with public employee speech rights leaves unclear what standard applies in...
More than 20 million Americans work for federal, state or local governments. Sometimes these employe...