Jawboning
Gary Waters

Blog

Jawboning

The First Amendment imposes stringent constraints on the government’s power to regulate speech, but the question of when the First Amendment prohibits jawboning—informal government efforts to persuade, cajole, or strong-arm private platforms to change their content-moderation practices—warrants more attention than it’s received thus far. Some forms of jawboning are probably best understood as a legitimate aspect of governance. Others are probably best understood as illegitimate, and possibly unconstitutional, efforts to manipulate or censor public discourse. 

This blog channel highlights the Institute’s ongoing research and education efforts related to jawboning.

Research

Institute Update

Call for Participation: Federal Funding and the First Amendment

    

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Litigation

Lawsuit

Northeast Organic Farming Association of New York v. USDA

A case challenging USDA’s purge of climate-related webpages.

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Research

Essay Series

Regardless of Frontiers: The First Amendment and the Exchange of Ideas Across Borders

A project about surveillance, censorship, and the changing role of the international border

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Podcast

Podcast

"Views on First: Speech & the Border"

At the frontiers of censorship and surveillance

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