It’s Game Over for proponents of videogame regulation
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
December 2011
Many courts have pointed out that no one has been able to establish anything more than a correlation—and not causation—between violence in videogames and real life. A look at the recently decided case of Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Assn.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
June 2008
It’s been a good run, but it is time for this chair to fade away and welcome the next generation of leadership for the Human Rights Section Council.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
April 2008
A message from Section Chair Steven Helle.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
January 2008
A colleague told me recently of how she had been doing research into the Federal Communications Commission and expected her job to be easy because the FCC had always issued numerous reports on the industry and communications policy.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
December 2007
I attended a communications law seminar recently and two observations gave me pause.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
November 2007
Most people might assume that high school students have fewer rights than adults.
Student speech law heating up
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
November 2007
This article will offer a primer for when that upset parent with teen in tow comes marching into your office.
From the Chair
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
September 2007
A colleague related how she had been stopped recently on a Washington, D.C., street by an ACLU intern who was attempting to collect signatures on a petition.
Human Rights Symposium at University of Illinois
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
April 2006
The Human Rights Section Council sponsored a symposium on a variety of topics related to human rights on Feb. 24 at the University of Illinois College of Law.
Illinois charitable solicitation case before High Court
By Steven Helle
Human and Civil Rights,
April 2003
In the minds of most, telemarketers might well have replaced pornographers and 1950s Communists as having the most dubious claim to First Amendment protection for their speech.
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