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March 2021 Speech Code of the Month: Barnard College
Colleges usually earn a spot as 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Speech Code of the Month for maintaining a policy that is plainly restrictive of student expression on its face, but this month is a little different 鈥 we鈥檙e concerned about college policies we can鈥檛 even view.
Barnard College password-protects several of its speech codes, hiding them from prospective students and public scrutiny. For that reason, we鈥檝e made it our Speech Code of the Month for March.
Password-protecting policies may not seem so bad at first. Current students can access them, and that鈥檚 who the policies regulate anyway. But that leaves an important group out of the picture: prospective students. Before choosing to enroll, individuals may want to review the policies at a particular school to make sure policies that could be applied to infringe on their rights are not in place. Schools that hide these policies from the public rob prospective students of that crucial opportunity, so we automatically give them our worst, 鈥渞ed light鈥 rating, sight unseen.
叠补谤苍补谤诲鈥檚 webpage provides links to policies that regulate various areas of the university, but the majority of these links lead to the , which requires a Barnard username and password for access. We鈥檙e able to view the policy that regulates the use of information technology resources, for example, but the 鈥溾 (which likely include regulations on protests), the 鈥,鈥 and the 鈥溾 policy are all restricted.
The fact that the college hides these policies makes us suspicious about their content 鈥 if these policies respect students鈥 rights, what would there be to hide? But even if we were to find that they perfectly track First Amendment legal standards (though Barnard is a private institution, it its students 鈥渢he right to freedom of expression鈥), we can鈥檛 be sure that would last forever.
A big reason we annually update all of the schools in FIRE鈥檚 Spotlight database of speech codes is that administrators frequently make substantive changes to policies. Our database serves as a one-stop shop for prospective and current students 鈥 as well as administrators 鈥 to review their school鈥檚 policies, but they鈥檙e robbed of that resource if we can鈥檛 update the entry due to password protection.
Out of the 478 colleges and universities in the Spotlight database, just three currently restrict policies from the public. (The other two schools are Connecticut College and Marquette University.) To live up to its free speech promises, Barnard must ditch this group of outliers and remove its password-protection.
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