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Civil Liberties: The First Amendment. Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to Constitution Part of the “Deal” to Obtain State Ratification of Constitution.

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Liberties: The First Amendment. Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to Constitution Part of the “Deal” to Obtain State Ratification of Constitution."— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Liberties: The First Amendment

2 Bill of Rights First 10 Amendments to Constitution Part of the “Deal” to Obtain State Ratification of Constitution Originally Limited National Government Only Applied to States Through “Selective Incorporation” – Which rights have not yet been incorporated?

3 First Amendment “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

4 First Amendment Establishment Clause Free Exercise Clause Free Speech Free Press Right of Assembly Right to Petition Government

5 First Amendment Establishment Clause Free Exercise Clause Free Speech Free Press Right of Assembly Right to Petition Government

6 Establishment Clause Why? Thomas Jefferson: “wall of separation” Lemon Test: Government act must – Have a secular purpose – In effect, neither advance nor inhibit religion – Not entangle government and religious institutions excessively

7 Establishment Clause Issues Public Schools: prayer, moments of silence, religious student groups, bible as a literary or historical text, teaching evolution / intelligent design Private Schools: voucher programs, state buying textbooks, supplemental instruction Public religious displays at holidays State-mandated 12 step programs

8 Free Exercise Clause Why? Issues: – Allowing parents to refuse medical treatment for children on religious grounds – Allowing ceremonial use of illegal substances – Attempts to forbid animal sacrifice – Limits on ability of prisoners to practice their religion

9 Freedom of Speech and Press Bad Tendency (- 1919) Clear and Present Danger Doctrine – Fighting Words (1942 – 1951) – Balancing Doctrine (1951 – 1960s) – In each case [courts] must ask whether the gravity of the "evil," discounted by its improbability, justifies such invasion of free speech as necessary to avoid the danger FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS DOCTRINE – Why??

10 Freedom of Speech and Press: What Is Protected? Political speech Artistic expression “Speech plus” – Symbolic speech/expression

11 Doctrine of Prior Restraint Government cannot prevent press from publishing material Applies even if publication can ultimately be punished Why?

12 What Is NOT Protected? Libel and Slander – Allow damages for false statements that harm someone’s reputation – Public figures must show “actual malice” Obscenity – defined by community standards – Appeals to prurient interest – Patently offensive – No literary, artistic, political or scientific value

13 Less Protected Speech Speech by students, especially pre-college Commercial speech (advertising)


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