In the U.S., the First Amendment of the Constitution protects freedom of speech. The First Amendment also defends freedom of ...
The First Amendment is meant to protect freedom of speech for the nation's people and press. But this week, that protection was tested. The First Amendment's freedom of speech got a workout this week.
Today, in AAUP v. Rubio, federal district Judge William G. Young (appointed by Ronald Reagan) ruled that speech-based ...
Such an evaluation runs directly counter to the modern free speech jurisprudence. The courts call this “chilling.” The threat of government reprisal gives one second thoughts — the chills — about ...
Clashes on university campuses, and administrators’ failures when dealing with them, have triggered actions by some governments meant to limit what universities and their students can say and do.
The First Amendment's freedom of speech got a workout this week. Just in the last few days, a late-night host suspended after a federal regulators threat; a newspaper sued by the president for looking ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results