Volume VI, Issue 2, Fall 1999


Related Browsing for:

The Fourth Circuit's Narrow Definition of "Matters of Public Concern" Denies State-Employed Academics Their Say: Urofsky v. Gilmore.

by Michael D. Hancock

Related Browsing provides the readers with other web pages that may be of interest.


http://www.gmu.edu/facstaff/handbook/preamble.html. This website contains George Mason University's Preamble.

http://www.gamu.edu/facstaff/handbook/c2/s4.html. Criteria for the Evaluation of Faculty members at George Mason University.

http://www.gamu.edu/facstaff/handbook/c2/s4.html. George Mason University's Policies and Procedures Relating to Severance.

http://mason.gmu.edu/~psmith5/censor.html. The whole sordid story on Plaintiff Smith's website.

http://www.aclu.org/court/urofskyvallendec.html. The ACLU sets forth the district court opinion granting summary judgment to plaintiffs.

http://www.youth.org/loco/PERSONProject/Alerts/States/NorthCarolina/freedom.html. This is an article on Boring v. Buncombe County, which is one of the cases cited in the note.

http://www.loundy.com/CASES/Urofsky_v_Allen.html. This website contains the text of the case, Urofsky v. Allen.

http://www.nea.org/cet/BRIEFS/brief12.html. "Focus on Technology."

http://www.freedomforum.org/speech/1998/2/16drama.asp. A North Carolina court says that an educator's First Amendment rights not are violated.


Copyright 1999 Richmond Journal of Law & Technology