Scholars and judges generally assume that the cornerstone of free speech doctrine is the distinction between content-based and content-neutral laws. Despite its wide acceptance, the distinction lacks any precedential or normative basis, unless it also accounts for another equally important distinction. The scholars\u27 conventional view of content-analysis overlooks the difference between the government banning a book or recommending it. Content-based laws that suppress specific content, like banning a television show, should be problematic, but content-based laws that promote specific content, such as promoting educational and political shows, should not be. Precedent and the First Amendment\u27s underlying normative concerns both require ...
Internet platforms serve two important roles that often conflict. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and ot...
When the Supreme Court introduced the “secondary effects” doctrine to allow for zoning of adult busi...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
Scholars and judges generally assume that the cornerstone of free speech doctrine is the distinction...
When then-Professor Elena Kagan emerged on the public stage in the mid-1990s, she declared “the dist...
In recent decades, the doctrine of content neutrality has become the cornerstone of First Amendment ...
No principle of First Amendment law is more firmly established than the principle that government ma...
In the hierarchy of constitutional offenses to free speech principles, content discrimination is nea...
This Article attempts to illustrate how media entertainment speech currently possesses a constitutio...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
The binary distinction between content-neutral and content-based speech regulations is of central im...
The lines between content-neutral, content-based, and viewpoint-based restrictions on speech remain ...
This article examines multiple problems now plaguing the fundamental dichotomy in First Amendment ju...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects freedom of speech. Courts categorize ...
Thus, I focus my attention on the problem of the First Amendment when the government must make conte...
Internet platforms serve two important roles that often conflict. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and ot...
When the Supreme Court introduced the “secondary effects” doctrine to allow for zoning of adult busi...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...
Scholars and judges generally assume that the cornerstone of free speech doctrine is the distinction...
When then-Professor Elena Kagan emerged on the public stage in the mid-1990s, she declared “the dist...
In recent decades, the doctrine of content neutrality has become the cornerstone of First Amendment ...
No principle of First Amendment law is more firmly established than the principle that government ma...
In the hierarchy of constitutional offenses to free speech principles, content discrimination is nea...
This Article attempts to illustrate how media entertainment speech currently possesses a constitutio...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
The binary distinction between content-neutral and content-based speech regulations is of central im...
The lines between content-neutral, content-based, and viewpoint-based restrictions on speech remain ...
This article examines multiple problems now plaguing the fundamental dichotomy in First Amendment ju...
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects freedom of speech. Courts categorize ...
Thus, I focus my attention on the problem of the First Amendment when the government must make conte...
Internet platforms serve two important roles that often conflict. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and ot...
When the Supreme Court introduced the “secondary effects” doctrine to allow for zoning of adult busi...
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitut...