Lee Bollinger is one of our foremost experts on the First Amendment--both an erudite scholar and elegant advocate. In this sweeping account, he explores the troubled history of a free press in America and looks toward the challenges ahead. The first amendment guaranteed freedom of the press in seemingly clear terms. However, over the course of American history, Bollinger notes, the idea of press freedom has evolved, in response to social, political, technological, and legal changes. It was not until the twentieth century that freedom of the press came to be understood as guaranteeing an uninhibited, robust and wide-open public discourse. But even during the twentieth century, government continually tried to erect barriers: the sedition la...
The First Amendment as a subject is challenging and provocative, and scholarly and popular understan...
The Supreme Court\u27s 1919 decision in Schenck vs. the United States is one of the most important f...
The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,...
Lee Bollinger\u27s Uninhibited, Robust, and Wide-Open argues that in an increasingly globalized worl...
Rich in historical detail, Images of a Free Press is an elegant, powerful guide to the evolution of ...
In Images of Free Press, 1991 University of Chicago Press, Dean Lee C. Bolinger, presents what Floyd...
Freedom of the press has long been a paramount concern of the dynamic human. A free press may act as...
Responding to the trend of media rights being subjugated through the legal process, this article exa...
Under the First Amendment, as it has come to be understood, the American press has more freedom than...
Thanks to advances in mass communication technology, it is now easier and cheaper for all of us to s...
The mass media are too important to American democracy, too capable of causing injury, and too easy ...
Both Justices and scholars have long debated whether the "freedom . . . of the press" was historical...
Does the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of “the press” simply mean that we all have the rig...
A Review of The First Amendment Reconsidered: New Perspectives on the Meaning of Freedom of Speech ...
Does the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of “the press” simply mean that we all have the rig...
The First Amendment as a subject is challenging and provocative, and scholarly and popular understan...
The Supreme Court\u27s 1919 decision in Schenck vs. the United States is one of the most important f...
The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,...
Lee Bollinger\u27s Uninhibited, Robust, and Wide-Open argues that in an increasingly globalized worl...
Rich in historical detail, Images of a Free Press is an elegant, powerful guide to the evolution of ...
In Images of Free Press, 1991 University of Chicago Press, Dean Lee C. Bolinger, presents what Floyd...
Freedom of the press has long been a paramount concern of the dynamic human. A free press may act as...
Responding to the trend of media rights being subjugated through the legal process, this article exa...
Under the First Amendment, as it has come to be understood, the American press has more freedom than...
Thanks to advances in mass communication technology, it is now easier and cheaper for all of us to s...
The mass media are too important to American democracy, too capable of causing injury, and too easy ...
Both Justices and scholars have long debated whether the "freedom . . . of the press" was historical...
Does the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of “the press” simply mean that we all have the rig...
A Review of The First Amendment Reconsidered: New Perspectives on the Meaning of Freedom of Speech ...
Does the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of “the press” simply mean that we all have the rig...
The First Amendment as a subject is challenging and provocative, and scholarly and popular understan...
The Supreme Court\u27s 1919 decision in Schenck vs. the United States is one of the most important f...
The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,...