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FAN 212 Symposium: "Gender Equality and the First Amendment"

Fordham University. Credit: Shutterstock / Victor Koval

Fordham University. Credit: Shutterstock / Victor Koval

Since I will be out of the country for some time, FAN will not be posted again until Wednesday, May 22. Meanwhile, the folks over at  will provide you all the free expression news that's fit to post.


Words and images are how people are placed in hierarchies, how social stratification is made to seem inevitable and right, how feelings of inferiority and superiority are engendered, and how indifference to violence against those on the bottom is rationalized and normalized. Social supremacy is made, inside and between people, through making meanings. To unmake it, these meanings and their technologies have to be unmade.

鈥 Catharine MacKinnon,  (1993)

From the Fordham Law Review:  by , , & .

Prof. Jeanmarie Fenrich

Gender equality demands equal opportunity to speak and be heard. Yet, in recent years, the clash between equality and free speech in the context of gender has intensified鈥攊n the media, the workplace, college campuses, and the political arena, both online and offline. The internet has given rise to novel First Amendment issues that particularly affect women, such as nonconsensual pornography, online harassment, and online privacy. On November 1鈥2, 2018, the Fordham Law Review brought together scholars and practicing lawyers from around the nation to address many of the pressing challenges facing feminists and free speech advocates today. The Symposium was a fitting topic to mark the occasion of 100 years of women at Fordham Law School.
 

Prof. Benjamin Zipursky

Over twenty scholars, practitioners, and writers participated in the two-day conference, along with Sylvia A. Law, Elizabeth K. Dollard Professor of Law, Medicine, and Psychiatry Emerita of N.Y.U. School of Law, who delivered the Robert L. Levine Lecture. Conference panels considered campus speech issues, including trigger warnings, safe spaces, and hostile classrooms; pornography, including nonconsensual pornography (or 鈥渞evenge porn鈥); being female online and how the internet affects women鈥檚 reputations, self-expression, and privacy; words, images, misogyny, and the First Amendment; and how gender representation in the media and politics impact political outcomes and reproductive rights.

Contributors & Titles

Prof. Danielle Citron
  • Danielle Keats Citron & Jonathon W. Penney,
  • Michele Goodwin & Mariah Lindsay,
  • Linda C. McClain,
  • Helen Norton,
  • Lynne Tirrell,
  • Keith E. Whittington,

Related

  • Mary Anne Franks, , First Amendment Law Review (2019) ("From Philadelphia to Skokie to Charlottesville, the First Amendment has been interpreted to protect speech by white men that silences and endangers women and minorities. As free speech doctrine and practice become increasingly concerned with private as well as state action, free speech becomes even more of a monopoly and monoculture dominated by the interests of white men. The impoverished and elitist conception of free speech that governs current American legal theory and practice undermines all three values the First Amendment is meant to protect: autonomy, truth, and democracy." )

Past-Related

  • Geoffrey Stone, , University of Chicago Law Review (2008)
  • Nadine Strossen, , NYU Press (2000)
  • C. Edwin Baker, , University of Chicago Law Review (1994) (reviewing C. MacKinnon's )
  • Dialogue: Floyd Abrams, Catharine MacKinnon, Anthony Lewis, New York Times Magazine (March 13, 1994)

First Amendment Law Review Symposium (link )

  • Geoffrey R. Stone, Sex and the First Amendment: The Long and Winding History of Obscenity Law
  • Clay Calvert, The FCC and Profane Language: The Lugubrious Legacy of a Moral Panic and a Grossly Offensive Definition that must be Jettisoned
  • Claudia E. Haupt, Sex and the First Amendment Through the Lens of Professional Speech
  • Kyla P. Garrett Wagner & Rachael L. Jones, Imbalance Between Speech & Health: How Unsubstantiated Health Claims in Secondary Effects Regulations of Sexually Oriented Businesses Threaten Free Speech
  • Jud Campbell, Compelled Subsides and Original Meaning
  • Eric Goldman, The Complicated Story of Fosta and Section 230

Headline: "Colorado lawmakers approve First Amendment bill to protect against frivolous lawsuits"

This from :

Colorado's Senate has passed a bill to protect citizens and news organizations from frivolous lawsuits intended to stifle First Amendment rights to free speech.

The bill creates an expedited process for a defendant to obtain a stay of such a lawsuit by arguing it's motivated by his or her exercise of free speech or for exercising their right to petition government.

A higher court can dismiss such a case. The bill also allows defendants to collect court costs and attorney's fees.

First Amendment Challenge to New Voter-Registration Law

  • Deborah Fisher, , First Amendment Encyclopedia (May 3, 2019)

A group of organizations who conduct voter-registration drives in Tennessee has filed a lawsuit against the state, alleging that a new law that imposes criminal and civil penalties is unconstitutional.

The groups allege  that the new law, signed by Gov. Bill Lee yesterday, "places onerous, unnecessary, burdensome, and unconstitutional obstacles upon on people who want to help others register to vote, subjects such people to harsh civil and criminal penalties based on vague and overbroad terms and standards, all of which violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and have a chilling effect on the exercise of fundamental First Amendment rights."

Student Speech Case: Calling for Principal To Be Fired

  • Eugene Volokh, , The Volokh Conspiracy (May 1, 2019)  ()

Related

  • First Amendment Watch (May 6, 2019)

Cato Report: Regulating Social Media

  • John Samples, , Cato Institute (April 9, 2019)

President Trump recently complained that Google searches are biased against Republicans and conservatives. Many conservatives argue that Facebook and Google are monopolies seeking to restrict conservative speech. In contrast, many on the left complain that large social media platforms fostered both Trump鈥檚 election in 2016 and violence in Charlottesville in 2017. Many on both sides believe that government should actively regulate the moderation of social media platforms to attain fairness, balance, or other values.

Yet American law and culture strongly circumscribe government power to regulate speech on the internet and elsewhere. Regulations of social media companies might either indirectly restrict individual speech or directly limit a right to curate an internet platform. The First Amendment offers strong protections against such restrictions. Congress has offered additional protections to tech companies by freeing them from most intermediary liability for speech that appears on their platforms. The U.S. Supreme Court has decided that private companies in general are not bound by the First Amendment.
 


However, some activists support new efforts by the government to regulate social media. Although some platforms are large and dominant, their market power can disintegrate, and alternatives are available for speakers excluded from a platform. The history of broadcast regulation shows that government regulation tends to support rather than mitigate monopolies.

Others worry that social media leads to 鈥渇ilter bubbles鈥 that preclude democratic deliberation. But the evidence for filter bubbles is not strong, and few remedies exist that are compatible with the Constitution.

SCOTUSblog Interview with Bollinger & Stone

  • Andrew Hamm, ,鈥 SCOTUSblog (5-3-19)

Forthcoming Book: The First Amendment in the Trump Era

  • Timothy Zick, , Oxford University Press (Oct. 28, 2019)
The First Amendment in the Trump Era (Oxford University Press)


Regardless of how the presidency of Donald J. Trump ultimately concludes, a significant part of its legacy will relate to the First Amendment. The president has publicly attacked the institutional press and individual reporters, calling them the "enemy of the people." He has proposed that flag burners be jailed and denaturalized, blocked critics from his Twitter page, communicated hateful and derogatory ideas, and defended the speech of white nationalists.

More than any other modern president, Trump has openly challenged fundamental First Amendment norms and principles relating to free speech and free press. These challenges have come at a time when the institutional press faces economic and other pressures that negatively affect their functions and legitimacy; political and other forms of polarization are on the rise; and protesters face diminished space and opportunities for exercising free speech rights.

This book catalogues and analyzes the various First Amendment conflicts that have occurred during the Trump presidency. It places these conflicts in historical context--as part of our current digitized and polarized era but also as part of a broader narrative concerning attacks on free speech and the press. We must understand both what is familiar in terms of the First Amendment concerns of the present era, but also what is distinctive about these concerns.

The Trump Era has once again reminded us of the need for a free and independent press, the need to protect robust and sometimes caustic criticism of public officials, and the importance of protest and dissent to effective self-government.

Four Other Forthcoming Books

  • Aimee Edmondson, , University of Massachusetts Press (Aug. 2, 2019)
  • Robert Boyers, , Scribner (Sept. 24, 2019)
  • Daxton Stewart, , Routledge (Oct. 2, 2019)
  • Laura DeNardis, Yale University Press (Jan. 7, 2020)

Forthcoming Scholarly Article

  • Edward A. Zelinsky, , Albany Law Review (forthcoming, 2019)

Five New Scholarly Articles

  • Michele Cotton, , First Amendment Law Review (2019)
  • Jared Schroeder, , First Amendment Law Review (2019)
  • Alexandra Baruch Bachman, , First Amendment Law Review (2019)
  • Adam Griffin, , First Amendment Law Review (2019)
  • R. Randall Kelso, , SSRN (April 2019)

"So to Speak" Podcast: More on Ferlinghetti & 1957 HOWL Trial

News, Editorials, Op-Eds, Etc.

52 Years Ago Today: Redrup v. New York (1967)

  • Today in Civil Liberties History

2018鈥2019 Term: Free Expression & Related Cases

Cert. Granted

Pending: Cert. Petitions

Cert. Denied

  • (reply brief)
  • (Thomas, J., concurring in denial of cert. with opinion)
  • (net neutrality)

FOIA: Review Granted

Free Expression Related Cases: Review Granted

  • (probable cause, First Amendment, and retaliation)

Review Granted: Free Expression Related Cases

  •  ()
  • (standing and gerrymandering) ()

Pending Free Expression Related Cases

  • (Art. III, standing)

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