Volume 17

Volume 17 Fall Issue

Correcting the Generally Accepted but Unjustified Interpretation of the Free Speech Clause by Michele Cotton

Associate Professor and Director of the Legal and Ethical Studies program at the University of Baltimore Yale Gordon College of Arts and Sciences

Market Place Theory in the Age of AI Communicators by Jared Schroeder

Assistant Professor of Journalism at Southern Methodist University

WTF? First Amendment Implications of Policing Profanity by Alexandra Baruch Bachman

J.D. Candidate, Class of 2019, University of North Carolina School of Law; Note Editor, First Amendment Law Review Vol 17

First Amendment Originalism: The Original Law and a Theory of Legal Change as Applied to the Freedom of the Press by Adam Griffin

J.D. Candidate, Class of 2019, University of North Carolina School of Law; Note Editor, First Amendment Law Review Vol. 17.

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Volume 17 Symposium Issue

Sex and the First Amendment: The Long and Winding History of Obscenity Law by Geoffrey R. Stone

Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor of Law, The University of
Chicago.

The FCC and Profane Language: The Lugubrious Legacy of a Moral Panic and a Grossly Offensive Definition that must be Jettisoned by Clay Calvert

Professor & Brechner Eminent Scholar in Mass Communication and Director of the Marion B. Brechner First Amendment Project at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Fla.

Sex and the First Amendment Through the Lens of Professional Speech by Claudia E. Haupt

Associate Professor of Law and Political Science, Northeastern University School of Law.

Imbalance Between Speech & Health: How Unsubstantiated Health Claims in Secondary Effects Regulations of Sexually Oriented Businesses Threaten Free Speech by Kyla P. Garrett Wagner & Rachael L. Jones

Kyla P. Garrett Wagner, M.A., is a Roy H. Park Doctoral Fellow in the School of Media and Journalism at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Rachael L. Jones, J.D. is the Senior Law Clerk to the Honorable Scott D. Makar of the First District Court of Appeal for the State of Florida.

Religious Arguments, Religious Purposes, and the Gay and Lesbian Rights Cases by Steve Sanders

Associate Professor of Law, Maurer School of Law, Indiana University
Bloomington.

Compelled Subsides and Original Meaning by Jud Campbell

Assistant Professor of Law, University of Richmond School of Law

The Complicated Story of Fosta and Section 230 by Eric Goldman

Professor of Law and Co-Director of the High Tech Law Institute, Santa Clara University School of Law.

Fearless Speech by Mary Anne Franks

Professor of Law, University of Miami School of Law. President, Cyber Civil
Rights Initiative.

Cybersecurity of the Person by Jeff Kosseff

Assistant Professor, Cyber Science Department, United States Naval Academy.

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Volume 17 Spring Issue

A Federal Anti-Slapp Law Would Make Section 230(c)(1) of the Communications Decency Act More Effective by Julio Sharp-Wasserman & Evan Mascagni

Immigrants are People Too: Constitutionalizing Free Speech Protections for Undocumented Immigrants by Vanessa Canuto

A “Slapp” in the Face of Free Speech: Protecting Survivors’ Rights to Speak up in the “Me Too” Era by Alyssa R. Leader

Learning to Discriminate: Vouchers and Private School Policies’ Impact on Homosexual Students by Olivia Perry