547 U.S. 47 (2006)
In Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc.
Does the Solomon Amendment, which conditions federal funding on universities providing equal access to military recruiters, violate the First Amendment rights of the institutions with respect to speech and expressive association?
The Solomon Amendment does not violate the First Amendment as it regulates conduct, not speech, and does not compel institutions to express support for military policies.
The Supreme Court unanimously held that the Solomon Amendment does not infringe on the First Amendment rights of schools. The Amendment regulates conduct and, as such, does not raise First Amendment concerns simply because the conduct is in part communicative.
The decision is significant because it delineates the boundary between permissible government conditions on funding and the protection of constitutional rights. It reaffirms that while the government cannot compel speech, it can require access as a condition of federal support, provided it does not directly impinge on expressive freedoms. This case guides law students in understanding the limits of free speech claims against federal funding contingencies and the concept of compelled speech within constitutional law.