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"Make Your Own Kind
of Music": Queer Student Groups and the
First Amendment
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Doni
Gewirtzman
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| As openly gay and lesbian students become a
more regular presence in public high schools,
students in many schools have started lesbian and
gay student organizations. In response, some
school districts and state legislatures have
attempted to prevent the clubs from meeting,
either through categorical bans on all
extracurricular groups or through legislation
specifically designed to prevent the gay clubs
from meeting. This Comment examines the First
Amendment issues raised by these efforts. It
argues that the Supreme Court's current approach
to student speech, which focuses on whether the
speech is school sponsored and on the application
of public forum doctrine, lacks an underlying
rationale and leads to inconsistent outcomes. In
its place, the author urges the Court to adopt a
mission-based test that examines the relationship
between the regulation on speech and the
educational purpose underlying the activity.
Because student clubs generally exist to promote
self-exploration and foster the development of
individual identity, this new test would extend
First Amendment protection to gay and lesbian
student groups. |
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Copyright
© 1998 by California Law Review, Inc.
California Law Review, Inc. (CLR) is a California
nonprofit corporation.
CLR and the authors are solely responsible for
the content of their publications.
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