In the First Amendment-based speech cases of both Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky in 2018 and Expressions Hair Design v. Schneiderman in 2017, Justice Sonia Sotomayor forcefully contended that the United States Supreme Court should have certified questions about statutory meaning to the highest relevant state court. This Article examines certification—its purposes, its pros, and its cons—in cases pivoting on whether ambiguous state statutes violate the First Amendment. Mansky and Expressions Hair Design provide timely analytical springboards. The Article argues that certification carries heightened importance today. That is because the justices now frequently fracture along perceived political lines over when a case involving speech mer...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines how courts select the standard of scrutiny—strict, intermediate, or something ...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
In the First Amendment-based speech cases of both Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky in 2018 and Ex...
The U.S. Supreme Court has shown a notable willingness to reconsider — and depart from — its First A...
The most fundamental problem in free speech law is not whether to protect the speech in question. Ra...
This Article examines the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2018 First Amendment-based decisions in both National...
In this Allen Chair Symposium issue of the University of Richmond Law Review, three outstanding scho...
Involvement of the Supreme Court of the United States with highly charged public issues understandab...
A number of recent Supreme Court opinions, primarily in the obscenity area, have fastened strict pro...
This article examines multiple problems now plaguing the fundamental dichotomy in First Amendment ju...
In this article, the Supreme Court\u27s shifting and expanding approach to intermediate scrutiny of ...
One of the central questions in free speech jurisprudence is what activities the First Amendment enc...
The government speech doctrine permits the government to convey its stance on issues through its act...
This Article examines the potential impact on First Amendment free-speech jurisprudence of the U.S. ...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines how courts select the standard of scrutiny—strict, intermediate, or something ...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
In the First Amendment-based speech cases of both Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky in 2018 and Ex...
The U.S. Supreme Court has shown a notable willingness to reconsider — and depart from — its First A...
The most fundamental problem in free speech law is not whether to protect the speech in question. Ra...
This Article examines the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2018 First Amendment-based decisions in both National...
In this Allen Chair Symposium issue of the University of Richmond Law Review, three outstanding scho...
Involvement of the Supreme Court of the United States with highly charged public issues understandab...
A number of recent Supreme Court opinions, primarily in the obscenity area, have fastened strict pro...
This article examines multiple problems now plaguing the fundamental dichotomy in First Amendment ju...
In this article, the Supreme Court\u27s shifting and expanding approach to intermediate scrutiny of ...
One of the central questions in free speech jurisprudence is what activities the First Amendment enc...
The government speech doctrine permits the government to convey its stance on issues through its act...
This Article examines the potential impact on First Amendment free-speech jurisprudence of the U.S. ...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines how courts select the standard of scrutiny—strict, intermediate, or something ...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...