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果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Depressing Commencement Speaker Prediction May Be Coming True: University of South Carolina Announces New President-Only Policy

Two years ago, FIREPresident and CEO Greg Lukianoff about how colleges might react to the increasing number of protests over controversial campus speakers: by enacting policies forbidding those speakers altogether. In the process, students鈥 opportunity for intellectual growth by engaging with a diversity of viewpoints would be severely limited. It was a bleak future Greg envisioned鈥攂ut one that may be, depressingly, beginning to materialize. Last week the University of South Carolina (USC) announced that students will only hear 鈥溾 at future graduations: that of the university president.

First, some background:

Every spring, we at FIREprepare for what we like to call 鈥disinvitation season鈥濃攖he time of year (typically around commencement) when students and faculty demand their school rescind a guest speaker鈥檚 invitation due to objections about something the speaker did, said, or believes. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Disinvitation Database keeps a running record of these disinvitation efforts at public and private American universities dating back to the year 2000. This year, at least ten colleges disinvited commencement speakers. That鈥檚 twice as many as in 2015.

But don鈥檛 expect to hear about any commencement speaker disinvitation attempts coming from the University of South Carolina: Starting in May 2017, 鈥攃urrently Harris Pastides鈥攚ill deliver the school鈥檚 commencement address.

From a legal standpoint, USC is well within its rights to do adopt such a policy. and , for example, have long had similar policies. However, it would be unfortunate if USC鈥檚 recent actions were, as Greg foretold, prompted by fresh fears of campus unrest over commencement speakers.

that concerns about 鈥減olitics and political correctness鈥 prompted the decision to implement the no-guest-speaker policy. But it certainly allows USC to nip any potential conflicts in the bud. In fact, USC has opted to silence potential debate before it even begins.

as much: That disinvitation attempts鈥攁nd the headaches they generate for administrators (bad press, etc.)鈥攎ight lead universities to make policies like USC鈥檚 the campus norm:

[U]niversities might grow increasingly leery of inviting speakers who might offend the most vocal part of their student body or their faculty. They could avoid this with structural changes, perhaps by putting speakers to a vote, or by only having the class valedictorian or school president speak (I should note that even the sitting university president isn鈥檛 always an uncontroversial choice). However, if the reason for this change is that campuses have become places where 鈥渟trangers鈥 are unwelcome or where even a single point of disagreement is enough to disqualify a speaker from campus, then we鈥檙e clearly failing to teach our students the values of intellectual openness, curiosity, and critical engagement that universities were always intended to foster.

A much more productive way for all universities to help prevent disinvitation attempts would be to better educate students on how to engage in constructive protest and disagreement. Only by ensuring that campus communities are exposed to a wide variety of beliefs and opinions can universities truly call themselves a 鈥渕arketplace of ideas.鈥

FIRE hopes USC鈥攁nd other schools who maintain restrictive guest-speaker policies鈥攚ill consider the negative impact these rules have on the educational community, and change them for the better.

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