Genevieve Lakier
Genevieve Lakier is professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School. Her work examines the changing meaning of freedom of speech in the United States, the role that legislatures play in safeguarding free speech values, and the fight over freedom of speech on the social media platforms. Between 2006 and 2008, she was an academy scholar at the Weatherhead Center for International and Area Studies at Harvard University. Her work has appeared in the Harvard Law Review, the Columbia Law Review, University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law, and Supreme Court Review. Lakier was the Knight First Amendment Institute’s 2021-2022 senior visiting research scholar. In this role, she led an interdisciplinary inquiry into disinformation, misinformation, and the First Amendment in the mass public sphere. During her tenure at the Institute, Lakier brought together scholars from a range of disciplines to explore these issues in a series of roundtables, and organized a major symposium to produce new scholarship on lies, free speech, and the law.
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Deep Dive : Jawboning
Jawboning as a Problem of Constitutional Evasion
Or why the "significant encouragement" test is not so bad
By Genevieve Lakier -
Essays and Scholarship
Lies and the Law: An Introduction
Exploring how the law regulates or should regulate false and misleading speech
By Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading “Editorial Discretion”
Despite what the Fifth Circuit recently suggested, “editorial discretion” is most definitely a whole thing
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading Schenck v. United States
Please don't falsely yell fire in a crowded theater
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading Bluman v. Federal Election Commission
Foreigners have interesting and important things to say too
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading Herbert v. Lando
Why exercising editorial discretion doesn’t exempt platforms from all transparency mandates
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading the First Amendment
Exposing the false assumptions that underlie contemporary First Amendment debates
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Rereading the First Amendment
Rereading Alvarez
It turns out the government can regulate lies … sometimes
By Evelyn Douek & Genevieve Lakier -
Deep Dive : Lies and the Law
New Research Project Focuses on Lies and the Law
How does (or should) the law shape the regulation of lies, disinformation, and misinformation in the digital age
By Genevieve Lakier & Katy Glenn Bass -
Institute Update : Lies and the Law
Call for Papers: Lies, Free Speech, and the Law
The Knight Institute invites submissions for its spring symposium, “Lies, Free Speech, and the Law” to be held at Columbia Law School, on April 7-8, 2022. The symposium will explore how the law regulates, or should regulate, false and misleading...
By Genevieve Lakier & Katy Glenn Bass -
Essays and Scholarship
The Limits of Antimonopoly Law as a Solution to the Problems of the Platform Public Sphere
Arguing which antimonopoly tools do and don't matter
By Genevieve Lakier -
Essays and Scholarship
The Problem Isn't the Use of Analogies but the Analogies Courts Use
Response to Heather Whitney's essay "Search Engines, Social Media, and the Editorial Analogy"
By Genevieve Lakier