Monday, August 11, 2025

New article: History and Tradition in First Amendment Intellectual Property Cases: A Critique

 Preprint available here.

Abstract

There are indications that the "history and tradition" approach the Supreme Court applied to gun rights and abortion restrictions may be coming for First Amendment doctrine. In intellectual property cases, it already has, with the Court using historical analogies for the right of publicity, copyright, and trademark. Unlike in the Second Amendment context, where the Court has reasoned from things earlier regulators didn’t do to strike down gun regulations today, in “history and tradition” First Amendment law the Court has reasoned by broad analogy to allow new speech restrictions.   

One lesson is that the history and tradition approach does not meaningfully constrain Justices even in low-political-salience areas like copyright and trademark, outside highly politicized contexts. The manipulability of levels of generality in making historical analogies has been justly criticized, but the IP cases provide a particularly clear contrast in outcomes from those in the Second Amendment cases, despite putatively using the same method of looking to historical models before—and even in place of—applying a means-ends test or other non-analogic scrutiny.

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