This article, which is based on a keynote address given at the 2023 Missouri Law Review Symposium, addresses the past and predicted future of defamation law in hopes of galvanizing needed reforms. As a necessary backdrop, this article explains why today’s defamation law remains so complex, tracks reforms over the last half century, and explains why the common law of defamation has not adapted adequately to the challenges posed by cheap speech in the digital era. The article then turns to assessing the complaints of defamation law’s most prominent would-be reformers and finds them to rest on an incomplete understanding of how defamation law’s complex pieces contribute to the whole. Finally, after identifying some important barriers to defama...
Two recent decisions by the Maryland Court of Appeals have brought about substantial changes in the ...
Five years down the line from the Defamation Act 2013 coming into force, its effect on freedom of sp...
Nearly forty years ago in the heat of the civil rights movement, the Supreme Court famously consider...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
I. The Constitutional Framework: An Updated Primer on New York Times v. Sullivan and Its Progeny ......
This article will explore several mechanisms for the resolution of defamation cases. It will first r...
Since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s historic ruling in New York Times v. Sullivan, the law of defamati...
Defamation law has had a bumpy ride lately. Designed as a mechanism for the restoration of unfairly ...
Even as technology transforms the world of communication—as it has over the course of history—defama...
This article discusses the traditional law of defamation, with particular emphasis on standards of l...
For years, American libel law has been soundly criticized as inefficient and overly complicated. Alt...
Defamation is a complicated tort, due in part to the differing rules that govern libel and slander, ...
The Uniform Law Commissioners are preparing to begin debate on the most sweeping changes to libel la...
Five years down the line from the Defamation Act 2013 coming into force, its effect on freedom of sp...
Two recent decisions by the Maryland Court of Appeals have brought about substantial changes in the ...
Five years down the line from the Defamation Act 2013 coming into force, its effect on freedom of sp...
Nearly forty years ago in the heat of the civil rights movement, the Supreme Court famously consider...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
I. The Constitutional Framework: An Updated Primer on New York Times v. Sullivan and Its Progeny ......
This article will explore several mechanisms for the resolution of defamation cases. It will first r...
Since the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s historic ruling in New York Times v. Sullivan, the law of defamati...
Defamation law has had a bumpy ride lately. Designed as a mechanism for the restoration of unfairly ...
Even as technology transforms the world of communication—as it has over the course of history—defama...
This article discusses the traditional law of defamation, with particular emphasis on standards of l...
For years, American libel law has been soundly criticized as inefficient and overly complicated. Alt...
Defamation is a complicated tort, due in part to the differing rules that govern libel and slander, ...
The Uniform Law Commissioners are preparing to begin debate on the most sweeping changes to libel la...
Five years down the line from the Defamation Act 2013 coming into force, its effect on freedom of sp...
Two recent decisions by the Maryland Court of Appeals have brought about substantial changes in the ...
Five years down the line from the Defamation Act 2013 coming into force, its effect on freedom of sp...
Nearly forty years ago in the heat of the civil rights movement, the Supreme Court famously consider...