Photo by Anthony Crider
Reflections on Charlottesville: Revisiting Hate Speech and the First Amendment Monday, October 2, 2017 noon-2 p.m. | Law School, Room 230 Recent events in Charlottesville, Virginia, raise the fundamental question of the extent to which longstanding First Amendment protection for hate speech should be revisited. Worldwide, there is a surge in racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia and anti-Semitism, and many of those close to political power are engaged in such expressions. The U.S. has robust protection for such speech, but some European countries do not. To what extent should the U.S. revisit its approach to hate speech?
PANELISTS Eric M. Freedman, Siggi B. Wilzig Distinguished Professor of Constitutional Rights
This panel will explore this question as well as whether there are suitable alternatives that are better in this evolving political and technological landscape.
MODERATOR Ellen Yaroshefsky, Howard Lichtenstein Professor of Legal Ethics and Executive Director of the Monroe H. Freedman Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics
Jonathan Lightfoot, PhD, Associate Professor of Teaching, Learning and Technology, and Director of the Center for “Race,� Culture and Social Justice, Hofstra University
Co-sponsored by the Black Law Students Association (BLSA), the Latino/a American Law Students Association (LALSA), the Muslim Law Students Association, OUTLaw, and the South Asian Law Student Association (SALSA).
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Barbara Stark, Professor of Law and Hofstra Research Fellow