Eugene Volokh (born February 29, 1968) is a Ukrainian-American legal scholar renowned for his expertise in First Amendment free speech law.[1] Born in Kyiv in the Soviet Union to a Jewish family, Volokh emigrated to the United States as a child and demonstrated exceptional precocity by earning a B.S. in mathematical computer science from UCLA at age 15.[2] After working as a computer programmer for over a decade, he obtained a J.D. from UCLA School of Law in 1992, clerked for Judge Alex Kozinski on the Ninth Circuit and Justice Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme Court, and joined the UCLA faculty as a professor of law.[3] Volokh holds the Gary T. Schwartz Professorship at UCLA, where he teaches courses on constitutional law, free speech, and related topics, and serves as the Thomas M. Siebel Senior Fellow at Stanford's Hoover Institution.[4] His scholarship, which includes influential books such as Academic Legal Writing and numerous articles on speech protections, internet law, and gun rights, emphasizes textualist and originalist interpretations to defend broad individual liberties against government overreach.[2] Volokh founded and long authored The Volokh Conspiracy, a pioneering legal blog that has shaped public discourse on constitutional issues since 2002.[1]
Early Life and Education
Childhood and Immigration
Eugene Volokh was born in 1968 in Kyiv (then Kiev), Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, to a nonobservant Jewish family.[5][6] His father, Vladimir Volokh, worked as a computer programmer, and his mother, Anne Volokh, served as an English translator and freelance journalist.[7] The family resided in the Soviet Union during a period of systemic repression, including antisemitism targeting Jews, which contributed to their decision to emigrate.[8]Volokh's early childhood occurred in a closed society with limited external information and emphasis on state-controlled education, where his parents supplemented schooling by teaching him Russian, English, mathematics, and basic programming at home to foster intellectual development.[9] He demonstrated precocious abilities, quizzing preschool peers on geography by age four and engaging with calculus by age seven.[6] These home-based efforts reflected his parents' recognition of the Soviet system's flaws and their prioritization of self-reliant learning amid ideological constraints.[9]On June 13, 1975, when Volokh was seven, his family—including his younger brother Sasha—emigrated from the Soviet Union to the United States, arriving in Los Angeles after relinquishing their careers, assets, and connections in pursuit of greater freedom and opportunity.[8][9] The move entailed significant risks, as the family had no prior visits to America or reliable firsthand knowledge of the destination, starting anew in a small West Hollywood apartment.[7][9] This immigration aligned with the broader exodus of Soviet Jews permitted under international pressure during the 1970s, escaping pervasive discrimination and repression.[8]
Formal Education and Early Achievements
Volokh entered the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) as a full-time freshman at age 12, initially balancing studies with part-time computer programming work before focusing exclusively on academics.[7][5] He completed a Bachelor of Science degree in mathematics-computer science in 1983 at age 15, having attended part-time from 1978 to 1980 and full-time thereafter.[2][5]From 1989 to 1992, Volokh pursued a Juris Doctor at UCLA School of Law, graduating first in his class while serving as one of the managing editors of the UCLA Law Review.[5] This academic distinction underscored his analytical prowess, building on his earlier prodigious entry into higher education and technical aptitude.[1]Among his early achievements, Volokh co-founded and served as half-owner of VESOFT, Inc., a software development firm in Los Angeles, starting in 1980 while still an undergraduate; he authored numerous articles on computer software during this period, establishing credentials in programming before shifting to legal studies.[5][2]
Pre-Academic Career
Computer Programming and Technical Work
Volokh began learning computer programming at age 12 from his father, Vladimir Volokh, who took him to workplaces in the evenings for hands-on experience.[10] By March 1980, at age 13, he started working as a freelance computer programmer for various companies, continuing this until October 1986.[11] In September 1980, he co-founded VESOFT, Inc., a Los Angeles-based software company, with his father as president and himself as half-owner and lead developer; the firm specialized in utility software for Hewlett-Packard's HP 3000 minicomputers running the MPE operating system.[12][13]At VESOFT, Volokh served as the primary technologist, developing and marketing products such as SECURITY/3000 for enhanced logon security, VEAUDIT for auditing capabilities, MPEX (an extended MPE command interpreter), and StreamX for data streaming utilities; these tools were adopted by over 6,000 HP 3000 installations worldwide.[14][15][16] He authored technical presentations and writings, including The Collected Works of VESOFT: Thoughts and Discourses on HP3000 Software (1984), which compiled his discourses on MPE software development and best practices.[12][17] VESOFT operated as a family business, with Volokh's mother Anne handling administrative roles, and grew from a basis in an early security program Volokh wrote as a child.[10][18]Volokh remained actively involved in software development at VESOFT until June 1992, after which he shifted focus to legal studies and academia while retaining partial ownership.[11] His early technical career spanned 12 years, establishing expertise in systems programming for enterprise minicomputers, which later informed his legal scholarship on technology-related issues such as software copyrights and intellectual property.[19][2]
Academic Career
Faculty Appointments and Roles
Volokh joined the UCLA School of Law faculty in 1994, initially as an acting professor.[20][2] Over the subsequent decades, he advanced to full professorship and held the Gary T. Schwartz Distinguished Professor of Law position, specializing in areas such as First Amendment law, copyright, criminal law, torts, and a seminar on firearms regulation.[2][4] He also directed the First Amendment Amicus Clinic, where he supervised student briefs as counsel of record.[21]In addition to his primary role at UCLA, Volokh served as a visiting professor at George Mason University School of Law from August to December 2001.[5] Earlier, from October to November 1999, he held a visiting professorship at Bar-Ilan University in Israel, teaching U.S. free speech law.[5]Following thirty years at UCLA, Volokh transitioned to emeritus status as Gary T. Schwartz Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus and Distinguished Research Professor, retaining an ongoing affiliation with the institution.[2][22] Concurrently, in July 2024, he assumed the role of Thomas M. Siebel Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, focusing on legal scholarship including free speech issues.[23][4]
Teaching Contributions and Recognition
Volokh has instructed at UCLA School of Law since 1991, delivering courses focused on constitutional law, torts, and related fields.[4] His core offerings include First Amendment law, business tort law, and an intensive editing workshop designed to refine students' analytical and drafting skills.[24] He also leads the First Amendment amicus brief clinic, enabling students to research and compose appellate briefs in actual free speech litigation, including Supreme Court matters, thereby bridging classroom theory with professional practice.[2]Previously, Volokh taught copyright law, criminal law, general tort law, and a policyseminar on firearms regulation, emphasizing doctrinal analysis alongside empirical and historical contexts.[2] These classes incorporate rigorous examination of judicial precedents and statutory interpretations, often drawing on his own scholarship to illustrate argumentative techniques.[25]A significant contribution lies in his development of pedagogical resources for aspiring legal scholars. Volokh authored Academic Legal Writing: Law Review Articles, Student Notes, Seminar Papers, and Getting on Law Review (5th ed., 2016), a manual offering step-by-step guidance on topic selection, outlining, citation practices, and revision strategies, which has become a standard text in law school writing programs.[26] Complementing this, he published methodological articles such as "Test Suites: A Tool for Improving Student Articles" (52 J. Legal Educ. 440, 2002), proposing structured checklists to test prose for logical flaws, ambiguity, and rhetorical weaknesses, and "Writing a Student Article" (48 J. Legal Educ. 247, 1998), which outlines pathways for students to produce publishable work.[27]In 2019, Volokh initiated a series of concise animated videos demystifying First Amendment doctrines and slippery slope arguments, serving as supplementary teaching tools for students and broader audiences seeking clear expositions of constitutional principles.[28] While Volokh's honors predominantly recognize his research output, such as the Gary T. Schwartz Distinguished Professorship, his instructional materials have elicited commendations from legal academics for enhancing scholarly precision and accessibility in education.[29][30]
Scholarship and Publications
Key Areas of Research
Volokh's primary research centers on the First Amendment, particularly free speech doctrine, where he has analyzed protections for symbolic expression, such as flag burning and other nonverbal conduct intended to convey messages.[31] His scholarship extends to modern applications, including First Amendment coverage for internet search results, arguing that editorial judgments by search engines warrant constitutional safeguards akin to traditional media.[32] Volokh has also examined refusals to deal under the First Amendment, contending that compelled speech through forced transactions implicates core expressive rights, as seen in analyses of platform moderation policies.[33]In the realm of online speech and platform regulation, Volokh has critiqued government pressure on social media companies to suppress content, proposing frameworks that treat dominant platforms as common carriers to prevent viewpoint discrimination while preserving private editorial control.[34][35] His work on internet takedown requests highlights tensions between reputation protection and speech rights, emphasizing empirical risks of overbroad liability regimes that chill public discourse.[36] These contributions draw on over 90 law review articles, cited in eight U.S. Supreme Court cases and hundreds of lower court opinions.[2]Volokh's research also addresses the Second Amendment, focusing on implementing the individual right to keep and bear arms post-District of Columbia v. Heller (2008). He advocates for doctrinal tests balancing historical traditions with modern regulatory needs, such as evaluating burdens on self-defense rights against public safety measures like school-zone restrictions or age-based limits.[37][38] This area intersects with his broader interest in firearms regulation policy, informed by historical analysis and policy arguments against categorical bans on certain weapons or carriers.[2]Additional key areas include copyright law, where Volokh explores intersections with free speech, such as fair use in digital contexts; religious freedom and church-state relations under the Religion Clauses; and tort law, particularly harassment and privacy claims that may conflict with expressive liberties.[39] His scholarship on academic legal writing provides methodological guidance for scholars, emphasizing clarity, structure, and citation practices in law review submissions.[2] Overall, Volokh's work, cited over 11,400 times in academic literature, prioritizes originalist and textualist interpretations to resolve doctrinal ambiguities in constitutional law.[39]
Books and Major Works
Volokh authored Academic Legal Writing: Law Review Articles, Student Notes, Seminar Papers, and Getting on Law Review, a textbook offering practical advice on scholarly legal composition, including strategies for selection by law reviews and revision techniques, with the fifth edition published in 2016.[4][2] This work draws on Volokh's experience editing student publications and has become a standard resource for law students seeking publication.[40]His primary contribution to constitutional law scholarship is The First Amendment and Related Statutes: Problems, Cases, and Policy Arguments, a casebook analyzing free speech protections through curated judicial decisions, statutory excerpts, and hypothetical problems to illustrate doctrinal tensions and policy trade-offs.[41] The seventh edition appeared in 2020, updating coverage of evolving Supreme Court precedents on topics such as compelled speech, viewpoint discrimination, and online expression.[4] Earlier editions, including the sixth in 2016, similarly emphasize rigorous analysis over rote memorization.[2]Volokh also produced The Religion Clauses and Related Statutes: Problems, Cases, and Policy Arguments in 2005, concentrating on the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses with parallel structure to his First Amendment text, incorporating cases like Lemon v. Kurtzman and policy debates on government accommodation of religion.[42][43] This volume, published by Foundation Press, addresses separationist and accommodationist interpretations through problems designed to probe constitutional boundaries.[2] These textbooks collectively reflect Volokh's focus on First Amendment interpretation via evidence-based reasoning and hypothetical application rather than ideological advocacy.[41]
Law Review Articles and Citations
Volokh has authored more than 100 law review articles, focusing predominantly on First Amendment jurisprudence, including freedom of speech, symbolic expression, and restrictions on crime-facilitating or child-shielding speech.[2][25] His scholarship emphasizes originalist interpretations and critiques of speech regulations, often arguing against broad categorical exclusions from First Amendment protection.[31]Notable articles include "Symbolic Expression and the Original Meaning of the First Amendment," published in the Georgetown Law Journal in 2009, which examines historical evidence for protecting nonverbal conduct under the Amendment's original scope.[31] In "Crime-Facilitating Speech," appearing in the Stanford Law Review in 2012, Volokh contends that speech aiding criminal acts should generally receive robust protection absent direct incitement, challenging doctrines like true threats.[44] Another key work, "Google: First Amendment Protection for Search Engine Search Results" (co-authored with Donald M. Falk) in the Journal of Law & Technology in 2012, asserts that algorithmic search outputs qualify as protected editorial judgments rather than neutral conduits.[32]Volokh's articles have exerted significant influence, with six cited in U.S. Supreme Court opinions and his body of work referenced in eight cases overall, alongside several hundred lower court decisions.[42][2] Scholarly citations exceed 11,000, per Google Scholar metrics as of recent data, reflecting broad academic engagement with his analyses of speech boundaries, Second Amendment rights, and internet-related expression.[39] Examples of judicial uptake include references in free speech disputes over defamation retraction duties and online content moderation, as in "The Duty Not to Continue Distributing Your Own Libels" (Notre Dame Law Review, 2021).[45]
Critiques of reputation-protection mechanisms bypassing defamationlaw online[36]
"Free Speech Rules, Free Speech Culture, and Legal Education"
Hofstra Law Review (2003)
Advocacy for open discourse norms in legal training to counter viewpoint suppression[47]
Blogging and Public Influence
Founding and Evolution of The Volokh Conspiracy
The Volokh Conspiracy was founded in 2002 by Eugene Volokh, a professor at UCLA School of Law, as a platform for legal and political commentary primarily focused on United States issues.[5] Initially launched under the name The Volokh Brothers on Volokh's personal website to feature posts from him and his siblings, it was quickly renamed The Volokh Conspiracy to enable recruitment of additional contributors beyond family members, reflecting Volokh's intent to build a broader group blog.[48] The name evoked a sense of collaborative intellectual plotting, aligning with its contrarian and analytical style on topics like free speech and constitutional law.[49]By 2008, the blog had established itself as one of the most widely read legal blogs, attracting contributions from law professors and influencing academic and public discourse through frequent, evidence-based posts.[50] It operated independently for over a decade, emphasizing original analysis over mainstream media narratives, until January 2014, when Volokh announced a partnership with The Washington Post to expand its audience and technical resources via a joint venture.[51] This move integrated the blog into the Post's platform, redirecting volokh.com traffic and providing enhanced visibility, though it later introduced a paywall that limited free access.[52]In December 2017, the blog transitioned from The Washington Post to Reason magazine's website, primarily to restore unrestricted, paywall-free availability to readers and maintain its commitment to broad dissemination of legal scholarship.[53][54] Under Reason's hosting, which aligns with the blog's often libertarian-leaning but independent viewpoints, it continued to evolve as a collaborative effort involving multiple law professors, posting regularly on Supreme Court cases, free speech challenges, and policy debates as of 2025.[22] This shift preserved its core focus on rigorous, contrarian legal analysis while adapting to platform demands for sustainability and reach.[55]
Media Appearances and Broader Impact
Volokh has made numerous media appearances, including 14 segments on C-SPAN since his first in 1998, covering topics such as constitutional law and free speech.[56] He provided expert commentary in a 2010 Reason.tv interview on gun rights, free expression, and civil liberties.[57] In 2019, he discussed First Amendment issues on Arizona PBS's Horizon program.[58] More recently, on October 8, 2025, Volokh testified as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution during a Senate hearing on government social mediacensorship, broadcast on C-SPAN.[59]Beyond television and hearings, Volokh has contributed over 70 op-eds to various publications, often reaching wider audiences than his blog posts.[60] He has been a regular op-ed contributor to The Wall Street Journal, addressing legal and policy matters.[7] His writings in outlets like The Washington Post, including analyses of "cheap speech" and its effects on democracy, have influenced discussions on media gatekeeping and online expression.[61]Volokh's broader impact extends to public policy advocacy, such as his energetic support for California's Proposition 209 in 1996, which banned racial preferences in public employment, education, and contracting.[7] His scholarship on topics like the Press Clause—arguing it protects public access to mass communication technologies rather than granting special privileges to institutional media—has shaped academic and legal debates on free speech equality.[62] Through expert testimonies and publications, Volokh has contributed to congressional examinations of platform moderation and government influence over online content.[63]
Legal Views and Advocacy
First Amendment and Free Speech Positions
Eugene Volokh has consistently advocated for expansive First Amendment protections, arguing that the government lacks authority to restrict speech based on its viewpoint, perceived offensiveness, or the speaker's intent. In his scholarship, he critiques "purpose tests" that deny protection to speech deemed motivated by bad purposes, such as commercial exploitation or electoral influence, contending that such tests undermine core free speech principles by allowing subjective judgments to override content-neutral safeguards.[64] He maintains that speech retains protection unless it falls into narrow, well-defined unprotected categories like true threats, incitement to imminent lawless action, or defamation, emphasizing empirical evidence from Supreme Court precedents that broad protections foster open discourse without empirically proven widespread harm from offensive expression.[65]Volokh opposes any "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment, asserting that viewpoint-based restrictions on racially or ideologically charged expression violate equal protection under the law and invite selective enforcement. He references cases such as Snyder v. Phelps (2011), where the Supreme Court protected Westboro Baptist Church protests at funerals despite their emotional distress, and R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992), striking down a bias-motivated disorderly conduct ordinance as impermissibly content-discriminatory, to argue that even speech viewed as bigoted merits protection to prevent government overreach into ideological conformity.[66] Similarly, he defends anonymous speech as an "honorable tradition of advocacy and dissent," challenging laws that compel disclosure of online identities, such as requirements for sex offenders to report pseudonyms, on grounds that they chill protected political and associational expression without sufficient countervailing interests.[67][68]On campuses, Volokh criticizes speech codes and administrative policies that suppress uncivil or controversial expression, testifying before Congress in 2017 that such measures, often justified under "hostile environment" rationales, enable viewpoint discrimination against conservative or dissenting voices. He highlights incidents where universities punished speech like ebonics jokes, Bible readings, or criticism of affirmative action as creating hostility, arguing this expands harassment law beyond conduct like threats into protected opinion, risking a "slippery slope" to broader censorship in workplaces and public forums.[69] Volokh also opposes compelled speech, such as mandatory ideological disclosures or union fees funding unwanted messages, viewing them as equivalently suspect to prohibitions since they force speakers to subsidize or propagate views against their will, as seen in critiques of public accommodation laws requiring expressive services like custom photography.[70][71]In conflicts between free speech and antidiscrimination norms, Volokh prioritizes speech rights, cautioning that exceptions for "harassment" or "bias" often mask efforts to enforce orthodoxy, supported by analysis of over 100 law review articles where he dissects how such laws disproportionately target disfavored perspectives.[72] His positions extend to digital contexts, defending online anonymity against doxing claims and rejecting overbroad "speech integral to criminal conduct" exceptions that could encompass advocacy preceding illegal acts, insisting on strict causation requirements to avoid diluting protections for political agitation.[73][74]
Views on Other Issues: Firearms, Harassment, and Affirmative Action
Volokh maintains that the Second Amendment secures an individual right to keep and bear arms for self-defense, independent of militia service, and critiques many gun control measures as unconstitutional burdens on that right following the Supreme Court's decisions in District of Columbia v. Heller (2008) and New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen (2022).[37] He has argued against restrictions such as mandatory waiting periods for purchases, which the Tenth Circuit struck down in 2025 as likely violating the right to self-defense by delaying acquisition during genuine needs, even for those with prior clearances.[75] Similarly, Volokh supported the Ninth Circuit's 2025 invalidation of California's "one-gun-a-month" limit, viewing it as an arbitrary cap unsupported by historical tradition and infringing on law-abiding citizens' ability to acquire arms.[76] He has also contended that revoking firearms licenses without due process, such as in cases of alleged domestic violence absent convictions, contravenes the Amendment, as seen in his analysis of a 2025 district court ruling.[77] While acknowledging permissible regulations like those on felons or the mentally ill, Volokh advocates for case-by-case restoration of rights post-sentence to align with historical practices of temporary disarmament rather than lifetime bans.[78]On harassment, Volokh emphasizes First Amendment constraints on laws prohibiting hostile work environments or criminal harassment, arguing that such statutes often overreach by punishing protected speech like political advocacy, religious expression, or criticism unless it involves severe, targeted threats or physical interference.[79] In his 1992 UCLA Law Review article, he detailed how harassment doctrine could suppress core speech—such as displaying controversial art or debating sensitive topics—if courts interpret "severe or pervasive" conduct too broadly without accounting for viewpoint neutrality and content-based exemptions.[80] Volokh has applied this to cyberspace and restraining orders, contending in a 2013 Northwestern Law Review piece that "one-to-one" communications (e.g., repeated unwanted messages) warrant narrower protections than "one-to-many" public speech, but even then, bans must avoid prior restraints on non-threatening expression.[81] Recent commentary reinforces this: he criticized 2023-2025 court cases where harassment orders stifled public criticism or social media posts lacking true threats, such as calling an ex-fiancée a "crumbum," as unconstitutional prior restraints, while upholding limits on erratic, menacing behavior near schools if tied to immediate risks rather than speech alone.[82][83]Volokh opposes race-based affirmative action in public universities and hiring, citing empirical evidence of "mismatch" effects where beneficiaries admitted under lower standards underperform and face higher dropout or failure rates, as documented in studies he referenced post-Fisher v. University of Texas (2016) and Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard (2023).[84] He has highlighted institutional efforts to suppress criticism of such policies, such as a 2015 University of California directive discouraging faculty from calling America a "melting pot" or questioning racial preferences, which he deemed an unconstitutional viewpoint restriction.[85] Extending this skepticism, Volokh argued in 2025 that analogous preferences for conservatives in academia would erode intellectual openness by prioritizing ideology over merit, potentially fostering echo chambers akin to existing left-leaning biases in faculty composition.[86] For private entities, however, he has theorized a potential First Amendment defense via expressive association—allowing universities to discriminate in admissions to advance a specific racial viewpoint message—but only if genuinely tied to institutional mission rather than anti-discrimination evasion, a position he explored in 2024-2025 analyses post-SFFA.[87] This stance reflects his broader view that while public AA violates equal protection, private actors' speech rights may shield selective practices absent government coercion.[88]
Controversies and Criticisms
Challenges to Speech Restrictions and Campus Policies
Volokh has critiqued campus speech policies that invoke "hostile environment harassment" doctrines to restrict protected expression, arguing that such standards often exceed constitutional bounds on public university campuses by punishing speech based on subjective offense rather than tangible harm. In his analysis, these policies, derived from Title VII employment law but extended to educational settings under Title IX, risk suppressing viewpoints through vague prohibitions on speech deemed to create an "abusive" atmosphere, even absent discriminatory conduct.[80][89]He maintains that while severe, objectively unreasonable harassment involving threats or interference with education may be regulable, broad applications of harassment rationales to ideological speech—such as controversial opinions on race, gender, or politics—violate the First Amendment on public campuses by enabling content-based restrictions disguised as neutrality. Volokh's 1992 article in the UCLA Law Review extended this reasoning to workplaces but explicitly parallels campus environments, warning that government enforcement of anti-harassment rules imposes speech injunctions that courts must scrutinize rigorously to avoid viewpoint discrimination.[80][89]In public commentary, Volokh has challenged university responses to protests and demonstrations, asserting that restrictions on encampments or chants must distinguish between unprotected conduct (e.g., blocking access) and core political speech, lest they infringe free expression rights. For instance, during 2024 campus unrest, he argued in Federalist Society discussions that labeling protests as "unprotected conduct" based on content risks eroding First Amendment protections, emphasizing viewpoint neutrality over administrative convenience.[90][91]Volokh differentiates public institutions, bound by constitutional mandates, from private ones, where speech codes may reflect institutional priorities without First Amendment liability, though he urges voluntary adoption of robust protections to foster intellectual freedom. His scholarship, cited by organizations like FIRE, underscores that overbroad codes historically justified censorship under harassment pretexts, advocating narrow tailoring to survive strict scrutiny.[92][89][91]
Responses to Recent Legal Developments and Opposing Viewpoints
Volokh analyzed the Supreme Court's decision in Murthy v. Missouri (June 26, 2024), which dismissed claims that federal officials unconstitutionally coerced social media platforms to censor content, noting that the ruling offered scant clarification on First Amendment limits for government "jawboning" or persuasion short of overt threats.[93] He had previously observed during oral arguments on March 18, 2024, that justices expressed reluctance toward sweeping injunctions against government communications but avoided endorsing the distinction between permissible urging and coercive pressure, leaving lower courts to parse evidence of implicit threats in future cases.[94] In critiquing opposing arguments for broader government leeway, Volokh emphasized historical precedents like Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan (1963), where informal pressures sufficed for First Amendment violations, rejecting claims that mere advisory requests from officials inherently lack coercive potential absent explicit demands.[95]Regarding Moody v. NetChoice, LLC (July 1, 2024), Volokh praised the Court's affirmation of social media platforms' First Amendment rights to curate personalized feeds, akin to editorial discretion, but highlighted the remand to lower courts on whether states could regulate algorithmic recommendations or default displays, preserving uncertainty for content-moderation laws.[96] He countered state advocates' positions—such as Texas's assertion that platforms function as neutral conduits rather than speakers—by arguing in amicus briefs and post-decision scholarship that platforms' selective amplification constitutes protected expressive choices, not mere utilities subject to common-carrier mandates.[97] In a February 2025 article for the Journal of Free Speech Law, Volokh expanded this critique, proposing that First Amendment safeguards for moderation extend beyond newspaper analogies to encompass algorithmic judgments, challenging views that equate platform neutrality with non-expressive transmission.[98]Volokh's ongoing litigation in Volokh v. James (2d Cir., decided August 1, 2025) exemplifies his opposition to state-imposed speech mandates, where he, alongside platforms Rumble and Locals, successfully enjoined parts of New York's 2022 Hateful Conduct Law requiring notifications for users posting content flagged as hateful, arguing it compelled platforms to editorialize on user speech in violation of the First Amendment. The Second Circuit's ruling, bolstered by the NetChoice precedent, rejected the state's defense that such disclosures were mere transparency tools, with Volokh contending they effectively chilled disfavored viewpoints by stigmatizing posters.[99]On campus speech amid post-October 7, 2023, protests over Israel and Gaza, Volokh endorsed the Academic Freedom Alliance's November 2023 statement defending even inflammatory expressions as protected unless inciting imminent lawless action, rebutting administrative pushes for restrictions framed as preventing harassment or disruption.[100] He has addressed counterarguments for curbs on doxing or speech risking violence by distinguishing unprotected true threats or fighting words from core political advocacy, as in Hoover Institution discussions emphasizing empirical thresholds over subjective offense.[101] In a March 2025 critique of ACLU positions, Volokh urged skepticism toward selective enforcement favoring progressive viewpoints, advocating institutional reforms to counter biases in viewpoint-neutrality claims at universities.[102]
Personal Life
Family and Personal Background
Eugene Volokh was born on February 29, 1968, in Kyiv, Ukraine, which was then part of the Soviet Union, to nonobservant Jewish parents Vladimir and Anne Volokh.[6][1] His father worked as a physicist in the USSR before the family's emigration.[103]In 1975, at age seven, Volokh immigrated to the United States with his parents and younger brother Alexander (Sasha), arriving in Los Angeles on October 8 after fleeing Soviet restrictions on Jewish emigration.[104][5] The family initially settled in West Hollywood, California, where Volokh's parents adapted to new circumstances; his father, who spoke Russian, Ukrainian, some English, Yiddish, and Hebrew, supported the household through various jobs while pursuing further opportunities in science.[9]Volokh is married and has two children, with the family residing in Los Angeles.[3] As a child prodigy, he demonstrated exceptional aptitude early on, entering university-level studies while still young, which shaped his rapid academic trajectory amid the challenges of immigrant adjustment.[105]