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Supreme Court Decisions

About: Supreme Court Decisions is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1804 publications have been published within this topic receiving 17066 citations.


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TL;DR: Kasky's suit against Nike illustrates the dangers posed by Supreme Court decisions defining "commercial speech" as a category worthy of some, but not full, First Amendment protection as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The lawsuit filed by Marc Kasky against Nike illustrates the dangers posed by Supreme Court decisions defining "commercial speech" as a category deserving of some, but not full, First Amendment protection. The category is ill-defined and may be safely abandoned without hampering the regulation of commercial activity. Recent decisions have again shown the path to regulating expressive conduct without violating the First Amendment, and those lessons should be applied in the context of commerce, requiring where expression is at issue satisfaction of either intermediate or strict scrutiny, as appropriate given the purpose of the statute, and sufficient evidence of the underlying offense, including the requisite intent.

4 citations

Book
24 Jan 2014
TL;DR: The focus of as discussed by the authors is on legislative action with respect to abortion, and discussion of the various legislative proposals that involve an examination of the leading Supreme Court decisions concerning a woman's right to choose.
Abstract: The focus of this report is on legislative action with respect to abortion, and discussion of the various legislative proposals that involves an examination of the leading Supreme Court decisions concerning a woman's right to choose

4 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a more nuanced view of the high school student speech cases and their impact on the law and the litigants' lives, arguing that the cases had a surprisingly modest real-world impact.
Abstract: Each of the Supreme Court’s high school student speech cases reflected the social angst of its era. In 1965’s Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, three Iowa teens broke school rules to wear armbands protesting the Vietnam war. In 1983, amidst parental and political upset about youth exposure to sexuality in the media, Bethel School District v. Fraser and Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier allowed censoring of an innuendo-filled student government speech and a school newspaper article on teen pregnancy and parental divorce. In 2007, Morse v. Frederick paralleled the 2000s rise of reality television and online self-exposure: an iconoclastic student, long feuding with his principal, unfurled a cryptically drug-themed banner (“BONG HiTS 4 JESUS”) as national television news crews visited his sleepy Alaska town. Many depict the school speech cases as fundamental alterations of student-school relationships, or even of the basic role of minors in society. Tinker draws praise as the landmark decision on student rights, and on minors’ constitutional rights generally; detractors complain that it “departed from the traditional . . . vision of education, which emphasizes order, civility, and the inculcation of virtue.” And the broader body of school speech caselaw is a familiar three-act Supreme Court saga: the 1960s Warren Court declared a new right; the Burger and Rehnquist Courts chipped away at it; and the Roberts Court undercut it further, leading Tinker detractors to say the Court is restoring their preferred traditionalist vision, while Tinker supporters lament that the Court “eviscerated” Tinker with “exceptions . . . swallow[ing] the Tinker rule” and “unquestioned deference” to school officials. This Article argues that a closer look shows a more nuanced state of affairs than the prevailing narrative of landmark decisions sweepingly altering the legal landscape and handing parties dramatic victories and defeats. Instead, even landmark major decisions such as the school speech cases show the limits of Supreme Court decisions, both for the law and for the litigants themselves. Close factual examination not only of each case, but of the social setting in which the case occurred, show that each was a major life event for each student, school, and community – but also that each had a surprisingly modest real-world impact, for the law and for the students litigants’ lives. On the law, none of the student speech cases reshaped the legal landscape to the extent commonly depicted. Tinker never had the impact on actual schools that it had on paper; the infeasibility of most speech litigation left censorship widespread and lawsuits rare. And schools’ post-Tinker wins never really gutted Tinker, as the unexpected continued vitality of Tinker in the lower courts shows. On the facts, each Court decision had unexpectedly limited impact on the student litigants themselves, as this Article documents with not only contemporary media accounts, but new interviews with various of the students and their attorneys. Whether the students won or lost at the Court bore little relationship to whether they felt victorious or defeated. Some who lost at the Court, or never reached a final verdict, express a striking sense of vindication from their cases. Another losing plaintiff found vindication in further legal battles and further speech shenanigans. Only one losing plaintiff actually expressed a complete sense of defeat and largely left behind any ambitions of issue advocacy. With their cases affecting them unpredictably, the six plaintiffs in the four school speech cases are the most vivid illustrations of the limits of Supreme Court decisions. The Overhyped Path from Tinker to Morse: How the Student Speech Cases Show the Limits of Supreme Court Decisions – for the Law and for the Litigants

4 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202311
202221
202118
202026
201938
201832