First Amendment Publications




Scholarly Publications

        Digitized Pornography Meets the First Amendment, 23 Cardozo L.R. 2011 (2002).

       A Lot More Comes into Focus When You Remove the Lens Cap: Why Proliferating New Technologies Make it Particularly Urgent for the Supreme Court to Abandon its Inside-Out Approach to Feedom of Speech, and Bring Obscenity, Fighting Words, and Group Libel Within the First Amendment , 81 Iowa L.R. 883 (1996), partially reprinted as  “The Old Problem of New Communications Technologies: Can We do Better This Time?”, in LAW AND THE ARTS (Greenwood Press, 1999) (Susan Tiefenbrun, ed.) and as “History and Decency: Overcoming the Threat of an Inside-Out Approach,” in REAL LAW@VIRTUAL SPACE: COMMUNICATION REGULATION IN CYBERSPACE (Hampton Press, 1998; revised for 2d ed. 2005) (Susan J. Drucker and Gary Gumpert, eds.).

        GROUP DEFAMATION AND FREEDOM OF SPEECH: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LANGUAGE AND VIOLENCE (Greenwood Press, 1995) (edited with Monroe H. Freedman).  

        Freedom of Information and the First Amendment in a Bureaucratic Age , 49 Brooklyn L.R. 829 (1983).

        American Libel Law 1825 - 1896: A Qualified Privilege for Public Affairs? , 30 Chitty's L.J. 113 (1982).

        Libel Law and the Preservation of the Republic 1787 - 1825, 30 Chitty's L.J. 176 (1982).


General Publications


            Pixelized Pixies: Chasing Virtual Smut
, Natl. L.J., October 8, 2001, a revision of  Pondering Pixelized Pixies, Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery, August 2001.

         Chasing ‘Virtual’ Smut, National Law Journal, October 8, 2001

         The First Amendment Also Applies to Lawyers , Natl. L.J., September 11, 1995. 

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