Televised political debates have become a staple of modern elections. Proponents of open access to such debates argue that third party participation is a democratic necessity. They see as catastrophic the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Arkansas Educational Television Commission v. Forbes, in which a state broadcaster was given the discretion to exclude a minor party candidate from a televised debate so long as the decision was viewpoint-neutral. This Article reads the Court\u27s decision as a functional, second best solution that seeks to mediate the expressive and democratic values implicated in both open and closed access models. More generally, the Article sees in Forbes germs of an institution-balancing vision of politics in the media...
The Supreme Court’s commerce clause jurisprudence represents a balance between ideology and institut...
Democracies can function without judicial review. Deliberation by elected legislators is more reliab...
This article completes a two-part series studying the constitutional jurisprudence of Judges Antonin...
Televised political debates have become a staple of modern elections. Proponents of open access to s...
Televised political debates have become a staple of modern elections. Proponents of open access to s...
In Arkansas Education Television Commission v. Forbes, the Supreme Court of the United States held t...
There is a growing trend in federal agencies towards explicit consideration of the Constitution, and...
This article presents a study of administrative and statutory schemes designed to regulate various a...
Journalists covering the 2000 presidential election controversy have had little trouble reconstructi...
The three branches of government rely on public engagement for the prosperity of the nation. Moreove...
A major focus in judicial politics research has been to measure the extent to which the U.S Supreme ...
In Westmoreland v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circ...
During the United States Supreme Court’s 2015-16 term, Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin (here...
Social media have the potential to revolutionize discourse between American citizens and their gover...
This article proposes a major expansion in the scope of First Amendment law and offers a fresh way o...
The Supreme Court’s commerce clause jurisprudence represents a balance between ideology and institut...
Democracies can function without judicial review. Deliberation by elected legislators is more reliab...
This article completes a two-part series studying the constitutional jurisprudence of Judges Antonin...
Televised political debates have become a staple of modern elections. Proponents of open access to s...
Televised political debates have become a staple of modern elections. Proponents of open access to s...
In Arkansas Education Television Commission v. Forbes, the Supreme Court of the United States held t...
There is a growing trend in federal agencies towards explicit consideration of the Constitution, and...
This article presents a study of administrative and statutory schemes designed to regulate various a...
Journalists covering the 2000 presidential election controversy have had little trouble reconstructi...
The three branches of government rely on public engagement for the prosperity of the nation. Moreove...
A major focus in judicial politics research has been to measure the extent to which the U.S Supreme ...
In Westmoreland v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circ...
During the United States Supreme Court’s 2015-16 term, Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin (here...
Social media have the potential to revolutionize discourse between American citizens and their gover...
This article proposes a major expansion in the scope of First Amendment law and offers a fresh way o...
The Supreme Court’s commerce clause jurisprudence represents a balance between ideology and institut...
Democracies can function without judicial review. Deliberation by elected legislators is more reliab...
This article completes a two-part series studying the constitutional jurisprudence of Judges Antonin...