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1993

Freedom of speech

Journal

Duke Law

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Unfriendly Persuasion: Enjoining Residential Picketing, Hazel A. Landwehr Oct 1993

Unfriendly Persuasion: Enjoining Residential Picketing, Hazel A. Landwehr

Duke Law Journal

Imagine that one pleasant Sunday afternoon, you look out your window and see a group of twenty to fifty people picketing on the street in front of your home. The picketers are carrying signs that name you. Although the gathering is ''peaceful,'' the very presence of the crowd is threatening, prompting you to close your windows, draw your blinds, and keep your family in the house until,the picketers leave. Now imagine that these same picketers, in greater or lesser numbers, re-create this same event at your home every Sunday afternoon. What should be a day of rest spent with your …


Black And White Images, John H. Garvey Oct 1993

Black And White Images, John H. Garvey

Law and Contemporary Problems

Whether the National Endowment for the Arts can control the content of speech that it pays for is a hard First Amendment question. The way in which Congress has tried to answer it is discussed.


Artists And Unconstitutional Conditions: The Big Bad Wolf Won’T Subsidize Little Red Riding Hood’S Indecent Art, Michael J. Elston Oct 1993

Artists And Unconstitutional Conditions: The Big Bad Wolf Won’T Subsidize Little Red Riding Hood’S Indecent Art, Michael J. Elston

Law and Contemporary Problems

Recent developments in the area of academic freedom and artistic expression are examined, considering First Amendment protection for artistic expression as well as the particular problem of government funding of the arts.