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FIREannounces Targeted Advocacy department, Home & Abroad Initiative
FIRE is proud to announce a new department dedicated to bringing our work to a wider audience.
FIRE鈥檚 Targeted Advocacy department will oversee projects like our First Amendment Library, Banned Books Week, art censorship activism and 鈥 starting today 鈥 our exciting Home & Abroad Initiative, dedicated to helping students and faculty with international ties.
Long-time FIREstaffer Sarah McLaughlin will lead the department.
鈥淎s the challenges that face freedom of expression evolve, we hope to reach new audiences who could benefit from learning more about their rights and how to defend them,鈥 Sarah said, 鈥渨hether through 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 First Amendment Library or resources for students studying abroad.鈥
Sarah said today鈥檚 launch of the department鈥檚 Home & Abroad initiative will 鈥渉elp FIRErespond to new challenges that arise as students, faculty, and academic institutions travel across borders.鈥
FIRE鈥檚 previous reporting on the topic can be found on our new Home & Abroad Resources page.
鈥湽炒絘pp官方鈥檚 main priority is to ensure that the important values of free speech and academic freedom are maintained on U.S. campuses,鈥 Sarah said. 鈥淏ut American universities鈥 relationship with the rest of the world, and the challenges and benefits associated with it, also affect free expression.鈥
鈥淏etween concerns about viewpoint-based visa denials at the U.S. border, censorship at American institutions or programs abroad, and foreign funding at U.S. campuses, it鈥檚 clear that the relationship between American universities and free expression is impacted by more than just the First Amendment and campus speech codes,鈥 she added.
Home & Abroad will provide students the resources they need to understand and defend their rights, including through today鈥檚 release of guides to student rights in Arabic, Chinese, and Spanish.
鈥淥ur goal is to educate both students coming to the United States about their rights here and students leaving the United States for programs abroad about potential censorship they could face overseas,鈥 Sarah said. 鈥淲e also want to encourage American universities to think carefully about the way partnerships with illiberal regimes may affect the rights of their community members.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 excited to help a new group of students 鈥 who, as non-citizens, understandably might not have a strong understanding of their rights while studying in the United States 鈥 learn that the First Amendment protects them here too, especially since many of them may be visiting from countries with oppressive speech and protest restrictions.鈥
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