LAW 5301: Constitutional Law: First Amendment - 2161

Constitutional Law: First Amendment
Class Term:
Fall Term 2015-2016
Catalog Number:
5301
Class Number:
26821
Class Schedule:
Monday, Wednesday
12:30 pm -
1:45 pm
Room:
LAW G20
Professor(s):

Professor

Type:
Lecture
Credits:
3 (3 Contact, 0 Field)
Priority:
General Enrollment Course
Full Year Course:
No
Category:
Standard Courses

Grading Details

The grade will be based on two brief writing exercises that I will review individually to provide you with feedback and one longer paper or take-home examination that will give you a chance to synthesize some of the doctrines covered in the course.

Prerequisites

Description

When we think of freedom of speech, we generally think of protest, dissent and political controversies. There is good reason for this; robust discussion of issues of public policy and candidates for public office is an essential element of democratic self-governance. Today, however, the First Amendment is also invoked – often successfully – in a variety of other contexts. Can the Federal Government limit tobacco advertising? Can a school punish students for “cyber-bullying?” Can a city ban billboards for adult entertainment businesses? This course will provide a detailed examination of First Amendment doctrines and their application in a wide variety of contexts, both traditional and contemporary. Topics will include:  political speech, obscenity, libel, commercial speech, regulation of electronic media, limitations on the “time, place, and manner” of expression, symbolic speech, and rights of association. Some comparisons will be made between First Amendment doctrines and other areas of constitutional law.

First Amendment: Freedom of Expression