Content-neutral

/ˈkɑntɛnt ˈnutrəl/ adjective

A regulation that restricts speech without regard to the message being conveyed, focusing instead on secondary effects like noise, traffic, or aesthetics. Such regulations receive intermediate scrutiny rather than strict scrutiny.

From Latin 'contentum' (contained, held together) and 'neutralis' (of neither side). The legal concept emerged in 1970s First Amendment doctrine as courts distinguished between regulations targeting speech content versus those addressing incidental effects of speech activities.

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