Amendments- Bill of Rights

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Amendments- Bill of Rights

description

Amendments- Bill of Rights. 1 st Amendment. Speech- Government Regulation- Civil Liberties are not unfettered- Assembly Association Press Religion. SO HOW DO WE KNOW EXACTLY WHAT THESE RIGHTS MEAN? THE SUPREME COURT (and other courts) INTERPRET THE CONSTITUTION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Amendments- Bill of Rights

Page 1: Amendments- Bill of Rights

Amendments- Bill of Rights

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1st Amendment

Speech- Government Regulation-

Civil Liberties are not unfettered-

AssemblyAssociationPressReligion

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SO HOW DO WE KNOW EXACTLY WHAT THESE RIGHTS MEAN?

THE SUPREME COURT (and other courts) INTERPRET THE CONSTITUTION

HOW DO THEY APPLY THE CONSTITUTION TO CASES?

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OH NO! TESTS?

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Free Speech

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“CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER”

Modified by later courts to “imminent danger” or “incitement to imminent harm”

Can’t “cry fire in a crowded theater” – Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes

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Right to Associate

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Symbolic Speech

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WHAT ARE OTHER TYPES OF SPEECH THAT CAN BE REGULATED?

COMMERCIAL SPEECHDEFAMATORY SPEECH Slander Libel

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Right to Assembly

What Regulations are permissible?

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Freedom of the Press

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Freedom of Religion

???

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“LEMON TEST”

From Lemon v. KurzmanLaws involving religion: gov’s action must

have: Secular purposeMust NOT have: Primary purpose of either

advancing or inhibiting religion Result of “excessive government

entanglement” with religion.

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Obscenity?

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Students’ Rights

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4th Amendment

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5th Amendment

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What is to “Not be tried 2x for the same crime”

The question is “Double Jeopardy”• Dual Jurisdiction??

Civil v.

Crim

inal???

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6th Amendment

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8th Amendment

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COERCED CONFESSIONS

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Right to Privacy

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14th Amendment Tests for Discrimination

Rational basisStrict ScrutinySubstantial

Relationship

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TYPES OF DISCRIMINATION

De Jure discrimination – by lawDe Facto discrimination- by common practice

or individual actions which have the same result