As a result of the holding and the Burger Court's policy, he predicted courts would be considering fewer such cases in the future.
It was cited by the Burger Court in its 1973 obscenity decisions, including Miller v. California.
Burger Court (June 23, 1969 - September 26, 1986)
Consequently, the Burger Court was described as his "in name only".
What the essays reveal is that the Burger Court has been for many years the Rehnquist Court.
Yet the Burger Court consistently refused to grant the press any special dispensation from generally applicable civil litigation rules.
But the Administration has yet to produce evidence that the Burger Court's original ruling produced a rash of quotas between 1971 and 1989.
The Burger Court slowed down this evolution in children's rights, however.
The Supreme Court only began shaping the constitutional guidelines on the speech rights of companies about a decade ago, during the Burger Court.
A week earlier, the Court, coyly pretending it was not doing so, overturned a job discrimination landmark of the Burger Court.