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Keeping censorship track record alive, Fordham bans RAs from speaking with media

Fordham鈥檚 claimed commitment to free speech gives student employees the right to speak to the media in a personal capacity. Seems Fordham cares more about good PR at any cost.
Fordham University in Manhattan

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Fordham is the latest in a string of universities to violate resident assistants鈥 rights by preventing them from speaking with the media 鈥 including student media 鈥 about their jobs. 

Fordham told RAs they may not speak with the media about matters related to residential life or about the university generally. FIREwrote Fordham last month to urge it to amend its policies to respect student employees鈥 right to speak with the press as private citizens on matters of public concern.

This will be the fourth time FIREhas attempted to work with Fordham in the last three years to get administrators to make good on the expressive rights they promise students and faculty.

Fordham鈥檚 student handbook that 鈥渂y its very nature, the University is a place where ideas and opinions are formulated and exchanged,鈥 and that 鈥渆ach member of the University has a right to freely express their positions and to work for their acceptance whether they assent to or dissent from existing situations in the University or society.鈥

Fordham students cannot trust the promises the university makes.

Given this unambiguous promise, students will reasonably believe Fordham will respect its commitment and allow students to express themselves.

Unfortunately, they鈥檒l be wrong.

Fordham can鈥檛 backtrack on its free expression promises. But it鈥檚 trying.

Fordham鈥檚 decision to prohibit RAs from speaking with the media about the university flies in the face of its free expression commitment 鈥 which protects students鈥 rights to speak as citizens on matters of public concern, including those implicating university life. Fordham may, of course, limit student employees鈥 speech on behalf of the university and on information made confidential by the law, but it simply does not have jurisdiction over all student employee speech about the university.

We wrote Fordham:

Authorities may regulate constitutionally protected speech based on its content鈥攈ere, ResLife-related speech鈥攊f that regulation is the means least restrictive to expression to serve the authority鈥檚 compelling interest. Fordham does have a valid interest in ensuring RAs do not speak on the university鈥檚 behalf. However, this interest is not served when media policies are used to quell students鈥 speech as private citizens. Individuals, including students, who take employment roles at institutions committed to free expression do not relinquish their expressive rights 鈥渢o comment on matters of public interest by virtue [of that employment].鈥 Instead, they retain their right to speak as citizens on matters of public concern.

Fordham has not  responded to our letter or follow-up email reiterating our concerns. But that鈥檚 nothing new for the Bronx-area private school, whose level of intransigence on student rights issues is matched only by other bona fide bad actors in the campus speech space 鈥 schools like DePaul, Rensselaer Polytechnic, Syracuse, and Yale.

鈥淪peak Up, But Not at Fordham鈥

FIRE first learned of Fordham鈥檚 impermissible press policies by an 鈥 鈥淪peak Up, But Not at Fordham鈥 鈥 in The Fordham Ram criticizing the university鈥檚 record on free speech and its policies implicating resident assistants鈥 ability to speak with the media.

As the and our own case log make clear, Fordham is no stranger to free speech controversies. Its record of fixing its violations of free speech is even worse.

In 2016, FIREcriticized Fordham for refusing to recognize a FIREfor Justice in Palestine chapter. The SJP chapter had to sue Fordham for recognition, which it secured in a lower court, but a New York appellate court reversed the ruling and the highest New York court  sided with Fordham.

As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Will Creeley wrote in 2021 after Fordham rescinded SJP鈥檚 recognition, 鈥湽炒絘pp官方, faculty, alumni, and the general public now know 鈥 if there were any doubt 鈥 that Fordham鈥檚 promises of free expression aren鈥檛 worth a dime.鈥

Members and supporters of Fordham FIREfor Justice in Palestine rallied in 2017 on the university's Manhattan campus to protest the Fordham administration's refusal to register SJP as a student organization.

鈥楩ordham should be ashamed鈥: Bitter outcome for pro-Palestinian group after university鈥檚 four-year fight to censor

Fordham previously proved its promises were only words on paper in 2020 when it banned student Austin Tong from campus and placed him on probation for posting a photo on Instagram of himself standing in his backyard with a legally-obtained gun to commemorate the Tiananmen Square Massacre and celebrate his freedoms in America. Like SJP, Tong sued Fordham.

Fordham has also appeared on 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 鈥10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech鈥 list in 2017, 2018, and 2021, showing its unwavering commitment to censorship.

Fordham students cannot trust the promises the university makes. But we鈥檒l keep trying to engage with administrators there and remain hopeful for change. As always, we鈥檙e happy to work with Fordham to improve its policies and explain its obligations as an institution that promises students free expression. 

In the meantime, we won鈥檛 stop calling out Fordham when it violates students鈥 expressive rights.


FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, . If you鈥檙e faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533). If you鈥檙e a college journalist facing censorship or a media law question, call the Student Press Freedom Initiative 24-hour hotline at 717-734-SPFI (7734).

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