The First Amendment contains five freedoms: religion, speech, press, assembly and the right to petition the government. The ...
The Fifth Circuit case, which centers Llano County's quiet removal of 17 library books, has drawn national attention — ...
The City of St. George and Southern Utah Drag Stars have reached an agreement after more than a year, requesting to file a ...
Oklahoma wants to use state money for a charter school that would incorporate Catholic teachings throughout curriculum and ...
Title VI Must Be Applied Consistent with First Amendment Principles, Even When the Defendant is a Private Institution. At the outset, Cooper Union maintains that Gartenberg's hostile environment ...
Many Americans support prohibiting commercials for prescription drugs on television. But enacting that ban could be ...
From Friday's decision by Judge Michael Watson (S.D. Ohio) in Sullivan v. Ohio State Univ.: American public universities have traditionally "prided ...
America’s increasingly crowded public square was often filled with hostility, becoming an angry arena where people shout past one another across religious and ideological divides.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was initially adopted is 1791 and simply states: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise ...
It is too much to hope that one executive will change the constitutional awareness of the executive branch’s unelected actors. But change must begin somewhere.
My name is Angele Latham, and I am the First Amendment reporter at The Tennessean — a first-of-its kind beat created through a partnership with The Tennessean, the Freedom Forum and the ...