U.S. Department of Justice : For sale by Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Attorney General's Commission on Pornography : final report.
Commissioner biographies -- Individual commissioner statements -- Commission and its mandate -- Work of the commission -- 1970 Commission on Obscenity and Pornography -- History of pornography -- Pornography as a social phenomenon -- Regulation and the role of religion -- Obscenity law -- the modern history -- Constraints of the First Amendment -- Presumptive relevance of the First Amendment -- First Amendment, the Supreme Court , and the regulation of obscenity -- Is the Supreme Court right? -- Risks of abuse -- Market and the industry -- Market for sexual explicitness -- Motion picture industry -- Sexually explicit magazines -- Television -- Pornography industry -- Production of films, video tapes, and magazines -- Channels of distribution -- Retail level -- Role of organized crime -- Question of harm -- Matters of method -- Harm and regulation -- the scope of our inquiry -- What counts as harm? -- Standard of proof -- Problem of multiple causation -- Varieties of evidence -- Need to subdivide -- Our conclusions about harm -- Sexually violent material -- Nonviolent materials depicting -- Degradation, domination, subordination, or humiliation -- Nonviolent and non-degrading materials -- Nudity -- Need for further research
Laws and their enforcement -- Overview of the problem -- Should pornography be regulated by law? -- Question is deregulation -- Law enforcement, priority, and multiple causation -- Problem of underinclusiveness -- Criminal law -- Sufficiency of existing criminal laws -- Problems of law enforcement -- Federalism -- What should be prosecuted? -- Special prominence of the printed word -- Regulation by zoning -- Civil rights approach to pornography -- Obscenity and the electronic media -- Enforcing both sides of the law -- Child pornography -- Special horror of child pornography -- Child pornography as a cottage industry -- Child pornography, the law, and the First Amendment -- Enforcement of the child pornography laws -- Role of private action -- Right to condemn and the right to speak -- Methods of protest -- Risks of excess -- Importance of education and discussion
Law enforcement agencies and the Justice Department -- Child pornography -- Victimization -- Civil rights -- Nuisance laws -- Anti-display laws -- Victimization -- Performers -- Social and behavioral science research analysis -- Organized crime -- History of the regulation of pornography -- First Amendment considerations -- Citizen and community action and corporate responsibility -- Production and distribution of sexually explicit materials -- Imagery found among magazines, books and films, in "Adults only" pornographic outlets -- Sample forms -- Witnesses testifying before the commission -- Witnesses invited but unable to appear before the commission -- Persons submitting written statements -- Commission charter.