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LIRA@BC Law

Abstract

Should lawyers be treated as public figures for purposes of defamation claims and, therefore, be subjected to a higher evidentiary standard of actual malice under the Supreme Court’s decision in New York Times Co. v. Sullivan? The question of whether lawyers should be treated as public figures raises broad questions about the nature of defamation law and the legal profession. By examining the Supreme Court’s defamation jurisprudence through the lens of cases involving lawyers as plaintiffs, one can see the deficiencies and inconsistencies in the Court’s opinions more clearly. And by examining the Court’s defamation cases through this lens, one can also see more clearly some of the complexities the legal profession now faces and its sometimes conflicting view of itself.

Files

File nameDate UploadedVisibilityFile size
02_long_A1b.pdf
8 Sep 2022
Public
1.01 MB

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Metadata

  • Subject
    • Communications Law

    • First Amendment

    • Legal Profession

    • Torts

  • Journal title
    • Boston College Law Review

  • Volume
    • 57

  • Issue
    • 5

  • Pagination
    • 1543

  • Date submitted

    8 September 2022