The director of public advocacy at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) offers a Q&A on what you can and cannot do.
The First Amendment protects protesters, but Florida laws put limits for situations when tensions escalate. Here's how.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Alabama and 19 other Republican-led states are asking the Supreme Court to blow up more than a century of First Amendment ...
Learn about Gregg Leslie's work at Arizona State University's First Amendment Clinic, helping journalists navigate legal ...
WASHINGTON — American presidents have long tested the bounds of First Amendment protections. From John Adams enforcing the Sedition Act that criminalized critical speech, to Woodrow Wilson suppressing ...
The First Amendment protects the right to protest, but this right does not extend to physical violence. Protests have occurred nationwide following the fatal shooting of two people by federal ...
At least three rights protected under the First Amendment clashed in recent days as protesters and journalists, including former CNN anchor Don Lemon, were arrested in connection with a Minnesota ...
The First Amendment protects the right to protest – to an extent. Across the country, state governments including Florida's have passed laws that penalize those who escalate peaceful protests into ...