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Dartmouth Stands By Restrictive āBias Incident Reportingā Protocol, Loses ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās āGreen Lightā Rating

Note: This story concerns events that occurred between January 2013 and October 2015. It was scheduled to be posted several weeks ago, when we suddenly had to turn our attention to unfolding events at Yale University and the University of Missouri. Just as we were again ready to post it, controversy erupted at Dartmouth over a Black Lives Matter protest in the library that , with some students alleging they were pushed and shoved by protesters. This entry has been updated in places to include information about the current controversy, as we would be remiss not to mention it when discussing free speech at Dartmouth. But the decision to change Dartmouthās speech code rating, and the communications with Dartmouth officials that informed that decision, predates the current controversy.
After failing to heed several warnings from FIREthat its āBias Incident Reportingā protocol impermissibly threatens free speech on campus, Dartmouth College has lost its āgreen lightā rating. The college had enjoyed the distinction since 2005.
FIRE first learned of Dartmouthās bias incident reporting system in January 2013, when it was implemented following an incident in which a student spoke in mock-Chinese gibberish to several Asian students in the cafeteria. After reading that Dartmouth was considering disciplinary action against the student, FIREwrote to the college in February 2013 to express our concerns, both about the administrationās response to the incident and about the underlying policy, which as:
behavior which constitutes an expression of hostility against the person or property of another because of the targeted person's age, creed, disability, ethnic or national origin, gender, gender identity, gender expression, marital status, political or social affiliation, race, religion, or sexual orientation.
, according to Dartmouthās Office of Pluralism and Leadership, include ātelling jokesā and āstereotyping.ā This policy is inconsistent with Dartmouthās claim to be an institution that āprizes and defends the right of free speech.ā If every joke or provocative remark about politics, religion, or culture is potentially subject to a formal investigation, Dartmouth students are not truly free to speak their minds.
Following our first letter, Dartmouth General Counsel Robert Donin responded to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ assuring us that āDartmouth did not initiate any disciplinary actionā in response to the January 2013 incident. But Doninās letter did not address our concerns with the policy itself.
After roughly two years passed with no change to the policy, FIREwrote to Dartmouth again in February 2015, this time warning that unless Dartmouth revised the policy, āFIREwill no longer be able, in good faith, to give the college our best rating for free speech.ā Donin responded that the college would āconsider [¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās] suggestions,ā but the policy remains unchanged to this day. Indeed, student newspaper that several students have filed bias incident reports as a result of the library protest, reportedly as a result of the protestersā ādisrespectā for other students in the library. Obviously, if any of the allegations of physical violence are true, the responsible students would be subject to discipline under other, legitimate college policies. But demonstrators should not be investigated or penalized for ābiasā simply because they may have used coarse or offensive language.
As a result of this continuing threat to free speech on campus, Dartmouth now receives a āyellow lightā rating. Dartmouth Trustee Emeritus T.J. Rodgers, who was instrumental in helping to secure Dartmouthās green light rating in 2005, expressed to FIREhis disappointment with the collegeās backslide:
I was deeply disappointed that Dartmouth lost its FIREgreen free-speech rating after we on the Board of Trustees and in the administration worked so hard to become one of fewer than ten Colleges and Universities in the U.S. to achieve that distinction in 2005.
It appears Dartmouthās mid-level administrators have allowed free speech, literally the First of our Bill of Rights, to be shoved aside by an ersatz speech code that punishes students for saying things that others may find offensive or discomforting.
FIRE shares Rodgersā disappointment, and we hope that Dartmouth will reconsider the decision to elevate the right not to be offended above the right to free speech on campus. Should that happen, FIREwould be pleased to restore Dartmouthās green light rating.
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