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Dr. Jason M. Shepard is a media law scholar, professor and chair of the Department of Communications at California State University, Fullerton.

Dr. Shepard emcees the Department of Communications commencement ceremony, awarding more than 700 degrees annually to Communications majors with concentrations in journalism, public relations, advertising, entertainment and tourism communications, and photo communications.

Dr. Shepard was awarded the inaugural Sharon Dunwoody Early Career Award from the University of Wisconsin-Madison's School of Journalism and Mass Communication in 2019, awarded to a Ph.D. graduate for excellence in research, teaching and service within ten years of graduation. With him are Dr. Katy Culver, director of UW's Center for Journalism Ethics (left) and former J-School directors and retired professors Dr. Sharon Dunwoody and Dr. Robert Drechsel.

Dr. Shepard moderated a panel broadcast on C-SPAN titled “True Threats, Hate Speech, and the Rise of Trump in America: Does the First Amendment Protect Too Much Offensive Speech,” at the Annual Conference of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC).

Dr. Shepard was presented with the 2015 University Leadership Award by CSUF President Dr. Mildred Garcia and College of Communications Dean Dr. Irene Matz.

Bio

Jason M. Shepard, Ph.D., is a media law scholar, communications professor and Interim Dean of the College of Communications at California State University, Fullerton. His research examines the role of the First Amendment in American democracy, journalism and culture, and his teaching expertise is in journalism and media law, history and ethics. Before academia, Shepard worked as an award-winning journalist in Madison, Wis., and a Teach For America corps member in New York City.

 

Shepard’s record of academic scholarship includes more than 120 publications and presentations. He is co-author of the textbook Major Principles of Media Law, now its 30th edition published by Cengage. He writes "Online Legalities," a regular column in California Publisher, the publication of the California News Publishers Association. Shepard’s first book, Privileging the Press: Confidential Sources, Journalism Ethics and the First Amendment, explored the history and ethics of journalists' protection of confidential sources. In Ethical Issues in Communication Professions: New Agendas in Communications, published by Routledge, Shepard proposed a new agenda for scholars of press freedom and responsibility in the digital era. In Ethics for a Digital Age, published by Peter Lang, Shepard critiqued the emerging uses of journalism ethical principles in First Amendment analysis. Shepard has also published research in Yale Journal of Law and TechnologyCommunication Law and PolicyJournal of Media Law & EthicsJournalism PracticeSan Diego Law ReviewNevada Law JournalWilliam & Mary Law Journal of Race, Gender and Social JusticeNexus Journal of Law and Policy, and Drake Law Review. Shepard’s research has been cited widely, including by a federal appellate court and in the New York Times

 

At Cal State Fullerton, Shepard primarily teaches Communications Law. His teaching expertise spans communications law, history and ethics; and journalism practices, production and innovations. He has also served as adviser of the Daily Titan student newspaper and website, during which his students won dozens of state and national journalism awards. In his role as department chair, he served as publisher of the Daily Titan.

 

Shepard was elected four times since 2014 as chair of the Department of Communications, one of the largest mass communications programs in the United States, with more than 1,500 majors with undergraduate concentrations in journalism, public relations, advertising and entertainment/tourism and graduate concentrations in professional communications, mass communications research and theory, and communications in tourism and entertainment. Shepard has twice successfully overseen his Department’s reaccreditation from the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC) and recertification from the Certification in Education for Public Relations (CEPR) from the Public Relations Society of America (PRSA), in 2015 and 2022.

 

Shepard’s leadership has been recognized by several university-wide awards. He received Cal State Fullerton's University Leadership Award in 2015. In 2016, Shepard was recognized with the Academic Senate’s Faculty Leadership in Collegial Governance Award. In 2017, he was part of a team that won the University's Teamwork and Collaboration Award for a partnership with Univision and the Latino Communications Initiative. In 2022, the Department received the Equity and Diversity Award from Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC). 

 

Shepard has served in several faculty leadership roles at Cal State Fullerton and in the CSU System, including as an elected representative to the state-wide Academic Senate of the California State University (ASCSU), Vice Chair of the ASCSU’s Academic Affairs Committee, and senator, Vice Chair and member of the Executive Committee of the Academic Senate of Cal State Fullerton.

Nationally, Shepard is an elected representative to the Association of Schools of Journalism and Mass Communication (ASJMC) and serves on the Accrediting Council for Education in Journalism and Mass Communications (ACEJMC). He has been active for nearly 20 years in the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), especially in the Law and Policy Division and LGBTQ Interest Group, including as former head. He served on the Elected Standing Committee on Professional Freedom and Responsibility (PF&R) and chaired AEJMC’s First Amendment Award from 2020-2023.

 

Shepard has a Ph.D. in mass communications, with a Ph.D. minor in law from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He was recognized with the inaugural Sharon Dunwoody Early Career Award from the UW-Madison's School of Journalism and Mass Communication in 2019, awarded to a Ph.D. graduate for excellence in research, teaching and service within ten years of graduation. Shepard has two master’s degrees, in education (Pace University) and in journalism and mass communication (UW-Madison), and a bachelor’s degree in journalism and political science (UW-Madison). Before graduate school, Shepard taught seventh and eighth grade English and U.S. history in the South Bronx of New York City, beginning as a corps member of Teach For America.

 

​As a journalist for 10 years covering crime, courts, politics, education and the media, Shepard won awards for investigative reporting, explanatory reporting, legal reporting, spot news reporting and feature reporting. Shepard wrote for Isthmus newspaper, an award-winning alternative weekly, from 2004 to 2009, and The Capital Times, the feistier of two local dailies, from 1996 to 2001. As an undergraduate at UW-Madison, he worked as a reporter and editor for The Badger Herald student newspaper. Shepard began his journalism career at age 16 as the school board reporter for the two local newspapers in his hometown of Wisconsin Dells, Wis. (population 2,808), the Wisconsin Dells Events and the Dells/Delton Daily.

 

Shepard lives in Long Beach, California.

 

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