Free Speech Unmuted
Avsnitt

Speech, Not “Conduct”: Supreme Court Rules on Conversion Talk Therapy | Eugene Volokh and Jane Bambauer | Hoover Institution

Dela

Jane Bambauer and Eugene Volokh analyze the US Supreme Court’s new Chiles v. Salazar decision, which struck down (by an 8-1 vote) a law banning sexual orientation/gender identity conversion therapy, including therapy that consists entirely of speech.

The Court held that the First Amendment protects professional-client speech, including counselors’ use of conversion therapy with minor patients when that therapy consists solely of speech.  In the process, the 8-justice majority rejected the state’s argument that such speech can be regulated as “speech integrally related to unlawful conduct” – and in the process, cited Volokh’s discussion of the speech integral to unlawful conduct exception in a friend-of-the-court brief that he filed.

Subscribe for the latest on free speech, censorship, social media, AI, and the evolving role of the First Amendment in today’s proverbial town square. 

Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör Hoover Institution. Innehållet i podden är skapat av Hoover Institution och inte av, eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.