This Article discusses the impact of the Supreme Court¿s recently enhanced categorical approach to free speech analysis. It demonstrates that, contrary to the concerns of some other scholars, the Court should not be understood to be entirely averse to balancing interests. In several cases¿such as those dealing with government employee speech, civil defamation, and fraud¿the Court continues to rely on balancing approaches. This has created a seeming internal contradiction among precedents that appear only to recognize the constitutionality of content-based restrictions on low-value categories of speech that have historically and traditionally been unprotected. These two lines of cases can and should be reconciled for the sake of adjudicative...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines why a free speech right to impugn judicial integrity must be recognized for at...
Chapter 1 introduces the “Doctrine of Categorical Exclusion” which to date has been loosely but pers...
This Article discusses the impact of the Supreme Court¿s recently enhanced categorical approach to f...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
This Article presents a multifactoral approach to free speech analysis. Difficult cases present a va...
This article, written for a symposium on Ronald Collins’s and Professor David Hudson’s catalogue of ...
A longstanding mystery of constitutional law concerns how the Free Speech Clause interacts with “gen...
Contemporary free speech law is typically misfocused. This misfocus serves neither the purposes unde...
This Article argues for a proportional First Amendment approach to compelled speech jurisprudence. I...
Symposium: An Ocean Apart? Freedom of Expression in Europe and the United States. This Article was o...
Because the Free Speech Clause limits government power to enact penal statutes, it has a close relat...
Abstract Those familiar with free speech jurisprudence know it as a complicated, contradictory, and ...
On June 1, 2015, the Supreme Court decided Elonis v. United States on statutory rather than constitu...
The application of First Amendment doctrine to cases involving expressive liberties of lawyers and j...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines why a free speech right to impugn judicial integrity must be recognized for at...
Chapter 1 introduces the “Doctrine of Categorical Exclusion” which to date has been loosely but pers...
This Article discusses the impact of the Supreme Court¿s recently enhanced categorical approach to f...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
This Article presents a multifactoral approach to free speech analysis. Difficult cases present a va...
This article, written for a symposium on Ronald Collins’s and Professor David Hudson’s catalogue of ...
A longstanding mystery of constitutional law concerns how the Free Speech Clause interacts with “gen...
Contemporary free speech law is typically misfocused. This misfocus serves neither the purposes unde...
This Article argues for a proportional First Amendment approach to compelled speech jurisprudence. I...
Symposium: An Ocean Apart? Freedom of Expression in Europe and the United States. This Article was o...
Because the Free Speech Clause limits government power to enact penal statutes, it has a close relat...
Abstract Those familiar with free speech jurisprudence know it as a complicated, contradictory, and ...
On June 1, 2015, the Supreme Court decided Elonis v. United States on statutory rather than constitu...
The application of First Amendment doctrine to cases involving expressive liberties of lawyers and j...
This Article argues that the United States Supreme Court should significantly alter its current cate...
This Article examines why a free speech right to impugn judicial integrity must be recognized for at...
Chapter 1 introduces the “Doctrine of Categorical Exclusion” which to date has been loosely but pers...