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A Big Year for Campus Censorship
Yesterday, FIREPresident Greg Lukianoff and Senior Vice President Robert Shibley kicked off Minding the Campus鈥檚 series on 鈥渢he year that was鈥 in higher education by writing about some of the past academic year鈥檚 in censorship.
These trends will be familiar to Torch readers. Greg and Robert cover 鈥disinvitation season鈥 and , to start. And discussions about sex in particular came under attack from several angles, as Greg and Robert explain:
[I]n December at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Professor Patti Adler鈥檚 long-running 鈥淒eviance in U.S. Society鈥 class was canceled for the following semester by skittish administrators who claimed that a lecture on prostitution that involved voluntary student participation could be seen as 鈥渉arassing.鈥 鈥
And it鈥檚 not just talk about sex itself鈥攖alk about sexual issues has been a big issue at Stanford this spring, with the student government refusing to allocate $600 of requested student funding to the Stanford Anscombe Society for a conference on traditional values and marriage. Despite the fact that the student government constitution contains a provision mirroring the exact wording of the First Amendment, the Stanford student government decided that viewpoint discrimination in terms of funding requests was just fine.
Complaints about 鈥渃ultural appropriation鈥 also seem to have increased this year. FIREat the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota, for example, blasted event organizers for planning to bring a camel to school for 鈥淗ump Day,鈥 because it was 鈥渋nsensitive to Middle Eastern cultures.鈥 (There was no known Middle Eastern theme to the event.) Perhaps more disturbing, though, is the idea that only people of certain skin colors can perform certain types of music:
Hampshire College in western Massachusetts made the even worse decision to cancel a campus performance by Shokazoba, an Afrobeat band, because its members are mostly not black. FIREcomplained that the band, which features an African-American lead singer, was appropriating black culture by playing Afrobeat music. It鈥檚 difficult to think of a more depressing commentary on the narrowing of the cultural horizons of today鈥檚 students than the fact that some campuses have come to the point at which the performance of music is to be limited by the color of one鈥檚 skin.
Finally, Greg and Robert review some of the best and worst moments for campus speech codes this year. On the positive side, Virginia lawmakers effectively abolished 鈥渇ree speech zones鈥 from the state鈥檚 public universities, establishing outdoor areas on campus as public forums. And 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Litigation Project has had an auspicious start, with Modesto Junior College agreeing to eliminate its free speech zone after student Robert Van Tuinen took the college to court.
Read what else Greg and Robert had to say about the year鈥檚 big events in campus censorship at .
- Politicians
- Free Speech
- Litigation
- University of Colorado Boulder
- Stanford University
- Nationwide: Colleges Across the Country Disinvite Commencement Speakers
- University of Colorado at Boulder: Professor Threatened with Harassment Investigation, Forced Retirement Over Classroom Presentation
- FIRE's Stand Up For Speech Litigation Project
- Stanford University: Viewpoint-Discriminatory Funding Retraction, Massive Security Fees for Student Group's Conference
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