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Northeastern University: FIREQuestion, Administration Defends Speech Code
Northeastern University鈥檚 student newspaper, The Northeastern News, recently did a on Northeastern鈥檚 Appropriate Use Policy, which makes punishable any e-mail 鈥渨hich in the sole judgment of the University is offensive.鈥 FIREwas so appalled by this policy that we named it our February 2007 Speech Code of the Month, and now it seems to have caught the concerned eye of Northeastern students as well.
According to the article, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 concern over censorship at Northeastern is warranted:
In recent years there has been at least one case of censorship under the AUP.
In September 2005, university administrators ordered the student-run humor publication, The Northeastern Times New Roman (TNR), to temporarily close its website because of two articles the university deemed offensive by the AUP.
In that case, the university labeled one article offensive for its discussion of SARS, AIDS and Ebola, the other for its inappropriate language. At the university鈥檚 request, TNR posted a disclaimer warning readers of offensive material. The publication鈥檚 website was eventually restored.
A student interviewed for the article had this to say about the policy: 鈥淚 feel you should be able to say whatever you want and expect privacy鈥t鈥檚 kind of scary that these regulations exist.鈥
Nonetheless, the Northeastern administration is standing behind this outrageous policy. Information Security and Identity Services Director Glenn Hill told the paper that 鈥淸p]rivate institutions have the right to regulate what鈥檚 done on their private property and with their possessions.鈥 He also said, inexplicably, that the policy exists to 鈥渢o protect, not restrict, academic discourse and free expression on campus.鈥 How exactly one protects free expression by giving the university total discretion to decide what speech is offensive鈥攁nd thus punishable鈥攕omehow escapes me. Perhaps Mr. Hill would like to clarify this for us.
In any event, while Mr. Hill is correct that private institutions have the right to make their own rules, Northeastern University explicitly claims that it 鈥渟upports as fundamental to the democratic process the rights of all members of the University community to express their views.鈥 News flash: in a diverse community, some people鈥檚 views will be offensive other people. If you claim authority to punish students for any e-mails that you might find offensive, you are denying members of the University community the right to express their views. While Northeastern is free to set its own rules, it is not free to promise its students one thing and then deliver another. Something鈥檚 gotta give.
It seems pretty clear what the students want. The question is, will the university listen?
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