A Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation -commonly referred to as a SLAPP-is a lawsuit intended to chill free speech and healthy public debate and to otherwise intimidate people from speaking out on issues of public concern. True SLAPP suits strike at the heart of the United States and Georgia Constitutions, specifically the rights to free speech and to petition the government enshrined therein. In recent years, state legislatures, including the Georgia General Assembly, have attempted to ward off SLAPP suits through legislation-commonly referred to as anti-SLAPP statutes-aimed at the early dismissal of SLAPPs and the award of attorney\u27s fees and costs to the SLAPP target. Anti-SLAPP statutes are, arguably, well-intended. The...
This article examines the origins, structure, and consequent effectiveness of the recently enacted I...
This Note compares the different treatment of state anti-SLAPP laws in federal courts, especially in...
Historically,political boycotts have occupied a centralplace in American tradition, going as far bac...
The Supreme Court’s landmark decision in New York Times v. Sullivan was meant to protect our fundame...
In recent years, dozens of states have enacted anti-Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation ...
Legislatures across the United States have passed laws to combat strategic lawsuits against public p...
The Act amends Georgia’s anti-SLAPP statute to expand its coverage from protecting the right to peti...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or “SLAPPs,” are frivolous lawsuits used to silence...
NOTE: The attached article is an updated version of the print edition, 9Dec2014. California was the ...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or SLAPP suits, as they are commonly called, are a ...
(Excerpt) An old proverb says that “when the student is ready[,] the teacher appears.” In this colla...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (“SLAPPs”) are meritless claims brought against indi...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution expressly guarantees the right of citizens to ...
Most states have established an intricate network of rules and procedures that independent candidate...
Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation ( SLAPP ) is a recently identified genre of intimi...
This article examines the origins, structure, and consequent effectiveness of the recently enacted I...
This Note compares the different treatment of state anti-SLAPP laws in federal courts, especially in...
Historically,political boycotts have occupied a centralplace in American tradition, going as far bac...
The Supreme Court’s landmark decision in New York Times v. Sullivan was meant to protect our fundame...
In recent years, dozens of states have enacted anti-Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation ...
Legislatures across the United States have passed laws to combat strategic lawsuits against public p...
The Act amends Georgia’s anti-SLAPP statute to expand its coverage from protecting the right to peti...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or “SLAPPs,” are frivolous lawsuits used to silence...
NOTE: The attached article is an updated version of the print edition, 9Dec2014. California was the ...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation, or SLAPP suits, as they are commonly called, are a ...
(Excerpt) An old proverb says that “when the student is ready[,] the teacher appears.” In this colla...
Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (“SLAPPs”) are meritless claims brought against indi...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution expressly guarantees the right of citizens to ...
Most states have established an intricate network of rules and procedures that independent candidate...
Strategic Litigation Against Public Participation ( SLAPP ) is a recently identified genre of intimi...
This article examines the origins, structure, and consequent effectiveness of the recently enacted I...
This Note compares the different treatment of state anti-SLAPP laws in federal courts, especially in...
Historically,political boycotts have occupied a centralplace in American tradition, going as far bac...