Kyu Ho Youm Author of Evaluating Organization Development
FEATURED AUTHOR

Kyu Ho Youm

Professor and Jonathan Marshall First Amendment Chair
Univ. of Oregon

Kyu Ho Youm is the Jonathan Marshall First Amendment Chair professor at the University of Oregon. He specializes in U.S. communication law, digital freedom, and comparative media law. His research has been cited by American and foreign courts, including the U.K. Supreme Court, the High Court of Australia, and the Supreme Court of Canada. Youm received his M.A. and Ph.D. from Southern Illinois University. He holds graduate degrees in law from Yale Law School and Oxford University.

Subjects: Law

Biography

Professor Kyu Ho Youm has been the inaugural holder of the Jonathan Marshall First Amendment Chair in the School of Journalism and Communication at the University of Oregon and a courtesy professor of law at the UO School of Law since 2002.  Prior to Oregon, he taught at Arizona State University and the University of Miami.  In January-February 2015, he was the visiting Wee Kim Wee professor in the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information at Nanyang Technological University.

Youm’s teaching and research focuses on U.S. communication law, digital freedom, and comparative media law.  He has extensively published about freedom of speech and the press.  Among his oft-noted law journal articles are “The Right of Reply and Freedom of the Press: An International and Comparative Law Perspective” in George Washington Law Review; “Freedom of Expression and the Law: Rights and Responsibilities in South Korea” in Stanford Journal of International Law; and “Cameras in the Courtroom in the Twenty-First Century: The U.S. Supreme Court Learning from Abroad?” in Brigham Young University Law Review.  

His research on freedom of expression has been cited by American and foreign courts, including the U.K. Supreme Court,  the High Court of Australia, and the Supreme Court of Canada.

Since 1996, Youm has contributed to several major media law texts and treatises, including Communication and the Law, Media Law and Ethics, International Libel & Privacy Handbook, and Media, Advertising & Entertainment Law Throughout the World.  He has published Press Law in South Korea.  He has edited nearly 50 communication law and media policy articles for the 12-volume International Encyclopedia of Communication.  Currently, he is working on an international and foreign media law text for U.S. law schools.  

Over the years, Youm has been actively invovled in various academic organizations.  He is a former head of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication’s Law and Policy Division and a former chair of the Communication Law and Policy Group of the International Communication Association.  In 2012-13, he was the president of the Association for Education in Journallism and Mass Communication, the premier academic organizaiton of 3,700-plus journalism scholars and practitioners.  He is on the editorial boards of a dozen scholarly journals in the United States and abroad.  

Youm has won a number of top paper awards at the academic conventions of AEJMC, ICA,  and the National Communication Association.  He has received fellowships from the American Press Institute, the AEJMC-Gannett Foundation, and the Poynter Institute for Media Studies.  He has been selected for research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Youm has been interviewed by U.S. and international news media on communication law issues.  He often contributes opinion columns and book reviews to newspapers and trade magazines.  Most recently, he wrote op-ed pieces on the “right to be forgotten” in EU law for the Straits Times in Singapore and for the Register-Guard in Eugene, Oregon.  Besides, he delivers lectures on press freedom and media law and sits regularly on scholarly and professional panels in the United States and abroad

Youm received his bachelor’s degree in South Korea and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Southern Illinois University.  He holds graduate degrees in law from Yale Law School and Oxford University.

Education

    MA and Ph.D (SIUC); MSL (Yale); master's in law (Oxford)

Areas of Research / Professional Expertise

    media law, freedom of expression, comparative law, cyberlaw, FoI.

Personal Interests

    Facebooking and Tweeting about media law and related topics.

Books

Featured Title
 Featured Title - Media Law and Ethics 5e - 1st Edition book cover

News

Kyu Ho Youm’s work reshaped free speech laws worldwide

By: Kyu Ho Youm
Subjects: Law

Growing up in South Korea in the 1960s and ’70s, media studies professor Kyu Ho Youm did not have the same rights to freedom of expression he enjoys today, as a naturalized citizen of the United States.

That disparity has shaped his lifelong passion for free speech issues and driven him to become one of the world’s foremost experts on the subject, with research that has had a profound impact on the laws that govern freedom of expression across the globe.

“The value of freedom of speech and freedom of the press in the United States remains a beacon of hope and freedom, even though we’re going through some ups and downs,” said Youm, who has served as the inaugural Jonathan Marshall First Amendment Chair in the School of Journalism and Communication for 15 years.

Youm’s body of work, which includes a multitude of books, research papers and articles on media law, has been cited in several landmark international court cases, from the U.K. House of Lords to the Canadian Supreme Court.

His 42-page U.S. law journal article from 2012 was cited in a Philippine Supreme court opinion in 2015 examining whether media should be allowed into courtrooms during criminal cases. The court ruled against the practice, despite the fact that Youm’s work cited in the decision argues in favor of allowing a media presence in U.S. Supreme Court hearings.

In 2017, his work was extensively cited in a decision by the South African Supreme Court in a similar case involving media presence in courtrooms. This time, the court upheld the right, based in large part on Youm’s work.

It’s an unexpected life story for Youm, who recalls the struggles of coming of age in South Korea. Both of his parents were basically illiterate. His father never made it past the third grade and worked as a tobacco delivery man, and his mother never went to school at all. Youm was the only one in his family to seek higher education, made possible by a full-tuition scholarship.

“I was very much interested in challenging myself to do better,” Youm said, “and I was lucky to have parents who tried to support me in pursuing my academic passion as a teenager.”

In 1972, the South Korean government suspended its constitution and granted the president, Park Chung-hee, enormous amounts of power, turning his lifetime presidency into a legal dictatorship. Widespread protests broke out. Among the protesters was Youm, at the time a college student studying English language and literature who wanted to see more open political democracy in his country.

“The South Korean government, not surprisingly, attempted to teach me Korean ‘Democracy 101’ by sending me to an army boot camp overnight,” Youm said.

He was forced into military service for nearly three years. But whenever given the chance, he spent his free time reading Time, Newsweek and Reader’s Digest in an attempt to maintain his English language skills and keep up with world events.

As a journalism graduate student at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale in 1981, Youm took a media law class with professor Harry W. Stonecipher, one of the nation’s leading media law scholars. After class one day, Stonecipher told Youm he thought he should drop out and try again some other time.

 “That kind of tough love was priceless,” Youm said.

Youm describes the class, which he passed the second time with an A, as one of the most challenging he ever took. It also changed his life, kick-starting his lifelong interest in American media law. Today, he still carries a photo of his mentor in his wallet.

Youm went on to expand his horizons in law at Yale Law School and the University of Oxford in England after several years of studying journalism at Southern Illinois University. In 2002, he came to the UO School of Journalism from Arizona State University.

After teaching media law for more than 30 years, Youm shows little sign of slowing down. He has many projects in the works, including a research paper co-written with Ahran Park, a former media law advisee in the journalism school and now a senior researcher at the Korea Press Institute in Seoul. The article on fake news as a legal issue is scheduled for presentation in January at the "Global Fake News and Defamation Symposium” at Southwestern Law School.

He is also working on a textbook for American law students focusing on international and comparative media law that should be completed in August. In April, he’s looking forward to participating as a speaker in the Global Freedom of Expression conference at Columbia University

“I will continue to enjoy teaching media law and sharing my media expertise with everyone who is interested in free speech and a free press as a fundamental human right,” Youm said.

He’s also grateful for all the opportunities he’s had in the United States.

“I always feel it is a privilege to be a professor teaching freedom of speech and freedom of the press in the United States, which I treasure,” Youm said. “If I had returned to South Korea, I doubt I’d be enjoying the kind of life I’ve been enjoying here in America, and I doubt I’d have the kind of extraordinary global opportunities I’ve had over the past 30 years.”

—By Eric Schucht, School of Journalism and Communication