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- Z1NN, Howard. Failure to Quit: Reflections of an Optimistic Historian
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- Five Years After the 9/11 Terrorist Attacks: Are New Sedition Laws Needed to Capture Suspected Terrorists in the United States?
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- The Espionage Statutes and Publication of Defense Information
- Timeline of US Govt. Surveillance & Spying
- Balancing National Security and Free-Speech Rights: Why Congress Should Revise the Espionage Act
- The Espionage Act and Today's High-Tech Terrorist Jamie L
- Journal of Media Law & Ethics
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- Which Radicals?
- FREEDOM of EXPRESSION in WARTIME " Thomas I
- Debs V. U.S. (1919)
- The Relationship Between the Industrial Workers of the World and the Communist Party Shortly After World War I
- A Paranoid State: the American Public, Military Surveillance and the Espionage Act of 1917
- Woodrow Wilson, Warren G. Harding, and the Espionage Act Prosecutions
- The Espionage Act & an Evolving News Media: Why Newspapers
- United States V. Rosen: Pushing the Free Press Onto a Slippery Slope?
- American Jews and World War I (1917-1918) American Jewish History Through Objects
- Reason for and Reactions During the First Red Scare
- Free Speech, World War I, and Republican Democracy: the Ni Ternal and External Holmes Stephen M
- German American Identity and Dissent During World War I
- Espionage Act of 1917
- Peter Galison Secrecy in Three Acts
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- Criminal Prohibitions on Leaks and Other Disclosures of Classified Defense Information
- Voices of a People's History of the United States
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- Book Review Corporate Personhood V
- The Supreme Court, the Smith Act, and the "Clear and Present Danger" Test
- Inchoate Liability and the Espionage Act: the Statutory Framework and the Freedom of the Press Stephen I
- Sedition Acts During the Presidencies of John Adams and Woodrow Wilson Juliana M
- Fear and Loathing in Constitutional Decision-Making, 2005 Wis
- American Bolsheviki: the First Red Scare in the United States, 1917 to 1920
- Graffiti, Speech, and Crime Jenny E
- Changing Times: Inside This Issue
- Amendment I of the U.S. Constitution Espionage Act of 1917 (18 U.S
- The Sedition Act of 1918 Was an Amended Piece of Legislation That Strengthened the Terms of the Espionage Act of 1917
- CONSPIRACY and the FIRST AMENDMENT David B
- Communists and the First Amendment: the Shaping of Freedom of Advocacy in the Cold War Era*
- Judge Learned Hand and the Espionage Act of 1917: a Mystery Unraveled
- Schenck V. United States, Lesson Plan
- Was Judge Learned Hand's Understanding of the Act Defensible?
- CHAIRMAN's FOREWORD the Honorable Daniel Patrick Moynihan
- Clause F Espionage Act
- A Progressive Mind: Louis D. Brandeis and the Origins of Free Speech
- Revealing State Secrets: an Analysis of the Tension Between National Security and Government Transparency