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In new brief, FIREasks Supreme Court to protect academic speech inside and outside the classroom

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Do professors cease being academics when they leave the classroom?
A recent from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit says public university faculty do not have academic freedom unless they are 鈥渢eaching a class鈥 or 鈥渄iscussing topics [they] may teach or write about.鈥 But that would severely curtail their rights under the First Amendment, which the has 鈥渓ong recognized鈥 protects 鈥渢he expansive freedoms of speech and thought associated with the university environment.鈥
The Fourth Circuit鈥檚 decision moves academic speech from the honor roll to probation.
That鈥檚 why yesterday 果冻传媒app官方, along with law professor and the , filed an amicus curiae 鈥 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 鈥 brief urging the Supreme Court to reverse that decision. All academic speech should be fully protected as a 鈥渟pecial concern鈥 of the First Amendment.
The First Amendment does not let public universities punish professors for their academic speech 鈥 whether that speech is in the classroom or not.
The case, Porter v. Board of Trustees of North Carolina State University, concerns remarks made by Stephen Porter, a professor in North Carolina State University鈥檚 College of Education. Porter is a critic of diversity, equity, and inclusion policies and particularly how those policies have impacted his own field: education. At a department meeting, Porter criticized the decision to include a DEI-related question on student surveys. And in a department-wide email, Porter criticized faculty hiring practices, which he thought were unduly motivated by DEI concerns. Then, in a blog post, Porter called a national academic association a 鈥渨oke joke.鈥
These remarks landed Porter in hot water with his department and colleagues. His lawsuit alleged that he was forced to teach an extra course, was not permitted to attend Ph.D. admission meetings, and was excluded from a 鈥減rogram area,鈥 effectively prohibiting him from advising doctoral students. With these key job responsibilities taken from him, Porter sued for unconstitutional retaliation against his free speech.
The trial court assumed that Porter鈥檚 statements were protected speech, and suggested further proceedings would be needed to balance his academic freedom against any of the university鈥檚 interests 鈥 like maintaining collegiality among the faculty. It dismissed Porter鈥檚 case on other grounds.
But on appeal, the Fourth Circuit 鈥渉a[d] no trouble concluding鈥 that Porter鈥檚 statements were not protected speech. According to the panel opinion, because he made them first two statements in department-only communications, they were not academic speech. As for the blog post, it concluded there was no evidence the university retaliated against him for that.
The Supreme Court should take Porter鈥檚 case and make clear that when professors leave their classrooms, their freedoms stay with them.
That was wrong. Porter鈥檚 criticism of DEI policies don鈥檛 have to occur in a classroom or academic journal to be academic speech. Porter is a professor of higher education. His critiques of higher education policy 鈥 including of his own institution鈥檚 policies 鈥 remain academic even if they leave the classroom. Academic speech regularly occurs at office hours, in hallways, or at large academic conferences. And many academics comment on issues outside their university鈥檚 walls: on television, in newspaper op-eds, or via blogs. Limiting academic speech to a narrow sliver of academic discourse 鈥渨ould imperil the future of our Nation,鈥 , by 鈥渋mpose[ing] a[] strait jacket upon the intellectual leaders in our colleges and universities.
The First Amendment does not let public universities punish professors for their academic speech 鈥 whether that speech is in the classroom or not. The Supreme Court should take Porter鈥檚 case and make clear that when professors leave their classrooms, their freedoms stay with them.
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