Table of Contents
FIREurges 15 top colleges and universities to improve restrictive press policies
Over the summer, a from the revealed that a majority of top colleges and universities maintain policies unfriendly to the press, including the student press.
As FIRE reported at the time, UC Center fellow John K. Wilson found that these policies include requirements that student and professional journalists seek administrative approval before reporting on campus and that journalists be accompanied by 鈥渕inders鈥 while engaging in on-campus newsgathering. They also often include prohibitions on faculty and staff speaking to reporters 鈥 prohibitions that violate not only the free press rights of student and professional journalists, but also the free speech and academic freedom rights of faculty.
This week, FIREwrote to those colleges and universities that the Wilson Report identified as maintaining such restrictive policies, elaborating on the ways in which these policies harm not only student journalists and faculty but also public trust.
Restrictive press policies harm the rights of student journalists and faculty across the nation
FIREhas encountered policies similar to those identified in the report time and time again. For example, this fall, a string of universities, including the University of Virginia, the University of Missouri, and Louisiana State University, adopted policies prohibiting student employees from speaking to the press 鈥 damaging the free expression rights of the student employees and of student journalists who seek to interview them. (The University of Missouri and the University of Virginia both quickly revised their policies after FIREreminded them that student employees maintain the First Amendment right to speak to the media in their individual capacities.)
As we explained in our letters, 鈥淸t]he unique role of universities as 鈥榩eculiarly the 鈥渕arketplace of ideas鈥濃 cannot be squared with burdens on journalists鈥欌攊ncluding student journalists鈥欌攔ight to seek information.鈥
Similarly, FIREwrote to Central Washington University last year when it was revealed that at least some departments required administrative prior approval of interview questions before allowing student journalists to interview university employees.
These policies, as well as those identified in the Wilson Report, have real repercussions for the ability of student journalists to fulfill their role as campus watchdogs. As long-time student press advocate and director of the Brechner Center for Freedom of Information Frank LoMonte puts it, these policies create an environment of 鈥溾樷 Instead of directly ordering students not to cover certain topics . . . authorities simply deny journalists from access to vital information.鈥 In other words, when student journalists can鈥檛 gather news on campus without permission, can鈥檛 take photos or videos to accompany their stories without permission, and can鈥檛 interview faculty or staff without permission, it creates a situation in which they simply can鈥檛 get their hands on the news in a timely and feasible manner.
The nation鈥檚 top colleges and universities must lead, not trail, in transparency and expressive rights
As FIREcontinued to see more restrictive media policies in the months following the Wilson Report鈥檚 release, it kept sticking out to us that of the top 25 colleges and universities nationwide (based on U.S. News & World Report鈥檚 rankings), 15 institutions maintain restrictive press policies. These institutions are supposed to be leaders in demonstrating that the college campus is the quintessential marketplace of ideas, but are instead all too often trailing behind when it comes to expressive rights.
On Tuesday, we wrote to the following universities, identified in the Wilson Report to earn less than an 鈥淎鈥 rating for their press policies, to urge them to revise their press policies to become leaders in transparency and to recognize the expressive rights of student journalists and faculty:
- Brown University
- Columbia University
- Cornell University
- Dartmouth College
- Duke University
- Emory University
- Georgetown University
- Harvard University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Northwestern University
- Princeton University
- Stanford University
- University of California, Berkeley
- University of Notre Dame
- Yale University
It is worth noting that Duke and Emory have already made laudable strides in being leaders on student free expression by maintaining student speech policies that earn 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 highest, 鈥済reen light鈥 rating in our Spotlight database. We are optimistic that they will continue to demonstrate their commitment to free expression by now accepting our invitation to examine their press policies, just as Loyola University Chicago did last spring after FIREand PEN America expressed concern about its press policy.
As we explained in our letters, 鈥淸t]he unique role of universities as 鈥榩eculiarly the 鈥渕arketplace of ideas鈥濃 cannot be squared with burdens on journalists鈥欌攊ncluding student journalists鈥欌攔ight to seek information.鈥 We hope each of these colleges and universities will take this opportunity to demonstrate their leadership by making their campuses more transparent and open to the press, especially the student press.
You can read UC Center's full report below:
- Free Speech
- Faculty Rights
- Speech Codes
- Press Freedom
- Brown University
- Columbia University
- Cornell University
- Dartmouth College
- Duke University
- Emory University
- Georgetown University
- Harvard University
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Northwestern University
- Princeton University
- Stanford University
- University of California, Berkeley
- University of Notre Dame
- Yale University
- Wilson Report: FIREWrites to 15 Top Schools to Express Concern About Their Press Policies
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.