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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
Celebrities And The First Amendment: Broader Protection Against The Unauthorized Publication Of Photographs, D. Scott Gurney
Celebrities And The First Amendment: Broader Protection Against The Unauthorized Publication Of Photographs, D. Scott Gurney
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Moment Of Silence: A Permissible Accommodation Protecting The Capacity To Form Religious Belief, Andrew Woodbridge Hall
A Moment Of Silence: A Permissible Accommodation Protecting The Capacity To Form Religious Belief, Andrew Woodbridge Hall
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Unifying Theory For The Religion Clauses Of The First Amendment, Thomas R. Mccoy, Gary A. Kurtz
A Unifying Theory For The Religion Clauses Of The First Amendment, Thomas R. Mccoy, Gary A. Kurtz
Vanderbilt Law Review
According to Justice Powell, the first amendment religion clauses are the source of "some of the most perplexing questions"that the Supreme Court confronts. In a long and rapidly expanding line of religion clause cases the Court has struggled, with a conspicuous lack of success, to articulate principles of broad applicability. The Court's efforts to date have resulted in a jumble of tests, standards, and theoretical approaches from which predicting the outcome in future cases is very difficult.
The conceptual problems that have frustrated the Court's attempts at doctrinal development center in two broad areas: first,the meaning and effect of the …
The Secular Meaning Behind The Lemon Test: Lynch V. Donnelly
The Secular Meaning Behind The Lemon Test: Lynch V. Donnelly
Touro Law Review
No abstract provided.
Public Forum Analysis And State Owned Publications: Beyond Kulhmeier V. Hazelwood School District, Pamela A. Schechter
Public Forum Analysis And State Owned Publications: Beyond Kulhmeier V. Hazelwood School District, Pamela A. Schechter
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.
The First Amendment, Commercial Speech, And The Advertising Lawyer, Justice Vernon R. Pearson, Michael O'Neill
The First Amendment, Commercial Speech, And The Advertising Lawyer, Justice Vernon R. Pearson, Michael O'Neill
Seattle University Law Review
The Supreme Court, in a few cases scattered over several decades, has implied the existence of a public right to a free flow of information as one facet of the freedom of speech; yet the Court has refrained from specifically basing a decision on any such right. But with the recent line of commercial speech decisions, the concept-of a public right to a free flow of information has become firmly established and merits detailed examination. That right, and the rationale of the Court in its commercial speech cases, may have far ranging implications. This Article explores these implications in three …
The Supreme Court And Freedom Of Expression From 1791 To 1917, Michael T. Gibson
The Supreme Court And Freedom Of Expression From 1791 To 1917, Michael T. Gibson
Fordham Law Review
No abstract provided.