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Full-Text Articles in Law
Introduction, Tracy Mitrano
Rejected For Exposure, Jessica Hanes, Seth Quidachay-Swan
Rejected For Exposure, Jessica Hanes, Seth Quidachay-Swan
Law Librarian Scholarship
A story published recently in the Detroit News about a Michigan man “asserting a constitutional right to take ‘ballot selfies’ by challenging the state’s long-standing ban on voting station and polling place photography” sparked our interest in whether generational social media preferences might be the driving force for citizens who seek to overturn such laws. After all, the plaintiff is among the earliest born into the Millennial generation, over half of which (55%) have shared a selfie on social media as of 2014, a practice that has become ubiquitous even in politics.
Why We Need Reed: Unmasking Pretext In Anti-Panhandling Legislation, Joseph Mead
Why We Need Reed: Unmasking Pretext In Anti-Panhandling Legislation, Joseph Mead
Law Faculty Articles and Essays
Over the past decade, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of areas where asking for help is restricted or banned. Whether called begging, panhandling, or solicitation, cities were spurred on by concerns of business owners and residents to ban or highly restrict this type of speech from occurring in public areas. Yet laws such as these have been repeatedly struck down by courts in recent months, fueled in large part by the Supreme Court’s decision in Reed v. City of Gilbert.
In this essay I argue that, at least in the context of anti-panhandling legislation, Reed …