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- United States Constitution 1st Amendment (5)
- Freedom of Speech (4)
- Church and State (2)
- Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (1)
- Debt Relief (1)
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- District of Columbia v. Heller (128 S. Ct. 2783 (2008)) (1)
- Freedom of Religion (1)
- Freedom of the Press (1)
- Gun Control (1)
- Hate Speech (1)
- High School Students (1)
- Lawyers' Fees (1)
- Morse v. Frederick ( 551 U.S. 393 (2007)) (1)
- Pleasant Grove City v. Summum (1)
- Printing Presses (1)
- Public Universities and Colleges (1)
- Religious Symbolism (1)
- Right to Bear Arms (1)
- United States Constitution (1)
- United States Constitution 2nd Amendment (1)
Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Bapcpa, The Gag Rule, And The First Amendment: A Proposal For Alignment Through Interpretive And Analytical Change, Cullen Ann Drescher
The Bapcpa, The Gag Rule, And The First Amendment: A Proposal For Alignment Through Interpretive And Analytical Change, Cullen Ann Drescher
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
No abstract provided.
Must God Be Dead Or Irrelevant: Drawing A Circle That Lets Me In, Richard M. Esenberg
Must God Be Dead Or Irrelevant: Drawing A Circle That Lets Me In, Richard M. Esenberg
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
Some scholars claim that current Establishment Clause doctrine can increasingly be explained in terms of substantive neutrality-that is, the idea that government ought to treat religion and irreligion (or comparable secular activities) in the same way. Whether a product of the Court's commitment to the idea or an artifact of the positions of the "swing" Justices, this proposition has considerable explanatory power. The Supreme Court has, in recent years, permitted the government to make financial support equally available for religious uses, as long as it is done on a neutral basis and through the private choice of the recipients. It …
Guns And Speech Technologies: How The Right To Bear Arms Affects Copyright Regulations Of Speech Technologies, Edward Lee
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
This Article examines the possible effect the Supreme Court's landmark Second Amendment ruling in District of Columbia v. Heller will have on future cases brought under the Free Press Clause.' Based on the text and history of the Constitution, the connection between the two Clauses is undeniable, as the Heller Court itself repeatedly suggested. Only two provisions in the entire Constitution protect individual rights to a technology: the Second Amendment's right to bear "arms" and the Free Press Clause's right to the freedom of the "press," meaning the printing press. Both rights were viewed, moreover, as pre-existing, natural rights to …
Separationism To The Extreme: The Mt. Soledad Cross And The Ninth Circuit's Crusade To Burden The Free Exercise Clause, Cameron M. Rountree
Separationism To The Extreme: The Mt. Soledad Cross And The Ninth Circuit's Crusade To Burden The Free Exercise Clause, Cameron M. Rountree
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
No abstract provided.
Unpleasant Speech On Campus, Even Hate Speech, Is A First Amendment Issue, Erwin Chemerinsky
Unpleasant Speech On Campus, Even Hate Speech, Is A First Amendment Issue, Erwin Chemerinsky
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
No abstract provided.
Making Sense Of High School Speech After Morse V. Frederick, Mark W. Cordes
Making Sense Of High School Speech After Morse V. Frederick, Mark W. Cordes
William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal
No abstract provided.