Shadow campaigns, Right to privacy, 4 agents of socialization, 527 Committees, Exclusionary rule, Declaration of Sentiments, Justice Potter Stewart, Coverture, Bush v Gore (2000),... Shadow campaigns, Right to privacy, 4 agents of socialization, 527 Committees, Exclusionary rule, Declaration of Sentiments, Justice Potter Stewart, Coverture, Bush v Gore (2000), Title IX of 1972 Education Act, Political Socialization, Libel & Slander, Random Digit Dialing, The 'Coffin Handbill' of 1828, De facto/ de jure segregation, The Electoral College, Tools of disenfranchisement, Plurality voting, The Bradley effect, Spectrum of Political Beliefs, Marketplace of ideas, Sampling frame, Push polling, Tillman Act (1907), An initiative, Bandwagon effect, Seneca Falls Convention, Jim Crow Laws, W.E.B. Du Bois, Equal Rights Amendment, Random vs Representative Sample, Equal Protection Clause, Tests Identifying Discrimination, Open and top-two primary, Retrospective & Prospective Voting, Redistricting, Gerrymandering, McCain-Feingold Act, Referendum, Voting Rights Act of 1965, Winner-take-all system, Reynolds v Simms (1964), 4 main causes of polarization, Henry A. Wallace, Causes of polarization, Proportional representation, Divided government, VEP vs. VAP, Straight-ticket voting, Reapportionment, 3 characteristics influencing party outcomes, Amendment 64, Gonzales v Raich (2005), Coattail effect.
Understand the Problem
The question is listing various terms and concepts related to politics, social issues, and history. It appears to be a compilation of key topics or study points possibly for reference or to create quiz questions.
Answer
Libel is written defamation; slander is spoken.
Libel involves written defamation, while slander refers to spoken defamation. Both are forms of false statements that damage a person's reputation, but are treated differently legally due to their modes of expression.
Answer for screen readers
Libel involves written defamation, while slander refers to spoken defamation. Both are forms of false statements that damage a person's reputation, but are treated differently legally due to their modes of expression.
More Information
Libel and slander are both unprotected by the First Amendment due to their nature as defamation.
Tips
Confusing libel and slander for protected free speech when they are actually exceptions to free speech protections.
Sources
- American Government (Lumen) - LibreTexts - batch.libretexts.org
- Analyzing American democracy: politics and political science - dokumen.pub
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