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Bollinger: This is our sixth project working together on major constitutional issues. Our driving philosophy has been, and remains, that a combination of voices from leading experts (including our own), along with focused recommendations on some of the nation’s most significant contemporary issues, and typically at historic judicial anniversaries, will yield a useful overview for experts and nonexperts alike; and welcome insights and contributions toward answering or resolving the questions at hand. In 2002, Eternally Vigilant: Free Speech in the Modern Era1Close launched our ambitions for reflecting on the principles of freedom of speech and press at the turn of the new century. The Free Speech Century2Close in 2019 was a similar effort to mark the one-hundredth anniversary of the first Supreme Court cases interpreting the First Amendment’s words: “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press . . . .”3Close This was followed on the fiftieth anniversary of the Pentagon Papers decision in 2021 by National Security, Leaks and Freedom of the Press: The Pentagon Papers Fifty Years On.4Close More recently, we took on the vexing issues of regulation (or not) of “bad speech” on the internet and social media platforms in Social Media, Freedom of Speech and the Future of Our Democracy (2022).5Close And earlier this year we published our own views on the constitutionality of affirmative action policies in higher education in A Legacy of Discrimination: The Essential Constitutionality of Affirmative Action.6Close Now, with this volume, Roe v. Dobbs: The Past, Present, and Future of a Constitutional Right to Abortion, we confront the remarkable beginning and end—once again, after a half-century—of the landmark Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade,7Close stunningly overruled by the Court in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.8Close
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