果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Speech Code of the Month: University of Wisconsin-La Crosse

FIRE announces its Speech Code of the Month for February 2016: the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse (UW-La Crosse).

Like many universities, UW-La Crosse maintains a protocol for students to report 鈥渂ias incidents鈥 to the administration. While bias incident policies have been around for years, they are becoming yet more common according to a in The Chronicle of Higher Education. And while many of these policies stop short of actually allowing for punishment of protected speech, they nonetheless have a serious chilling effect on student and faculty expression.

Writing for National Review, former FIREpresident David French this problem:

Universities are playing a dangerous constitutional game. They鈥檙e trying to deter speech they don鈥檛 like while avoiding creating policies or procedures that are plainly unconstitutional. As a result, [what] they often do is create a 鈥減rocess-is-punishment鈥 mechanism that subjects offending students to intrusive and humiliating investigations all the while claiming to any watching free speech advocates (or federal judges) that they鈥檙e not actually prohibiting protected speech, they鈥檙e just 鈥渋nvestigating complaints.鈥

And this deterrence, French writes, is quite effective:

I know from speaking to countless college students that bias-response teams have a profound chilling effect on free speech. In schools where teams are active, it鈥檚 the rare college student who has the intestinal fortitude to speak freely on matters of race, class, gender, or sexuality if their views are out-of-step with campus ideologues.

Which brings us to the bias reporting team at UW-La Crosse. By all accounts, it is an extremely active team; there have already been in the 2015鈥2016 academic year. This is perhaps, in part, because the university in extraordinarily broad terms: 鈥淎ny non-criminal act motivated, in whole or in part, by the victim鈥檚 actual or perceived race, religion, ethnic background, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, disability, or nationality.鈥 The university encourages anyone 鈥渉urt by hate鈥 to submit an official report to the university鈥檚 Hate Response Team.

And while the term 鈥渘on-criminal act鈥 could encompass both speech and conduct, it is clear that many reports are made on the basis of speech alone. Many of the are described as 鈥渟tatements,鈥 including numerous statements made in the classroom setting (something that has potentially tremendous implications for academic freedom if those statements were germane to the class discussion).

UW-La Crosse鈥檚 bias reporting system, like most such systems, does not itself establish a mechanism for punishment. But as the Hate Response Team鈥檚 2013鈥2014 (the most recent one available) explains, 鈥淸s]tudents who have been identified as suspects or perpetrators may be investigated in a manner consistent with the impact of the incident.鈥 This is precisely the type of 鈥溾榩rocess-is-punishment鈥 mechanism鈥 that can have such a powerful chilling effect on free speech.

As FIREco-founder Alan Charles Kors wrote in one of 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 earliest letters, concerning the investigation of a professor鈥檚 protected expression at the University of Alaska, protected speech is not a legitimate basis for an investigation:

The investigation, whatever its outcome, is categorically chilling of freedom. The intent to seek resolution, whatever its outcome, is categorically chilling of freedom. Individuals in a free society 鈥 are not investigated for their beliefs and protected expressions. Those beliefs and expressions are inviolable.

A university cannot be a place of free and open debate when it actively encourages students to report on each other鈥檚 perceived wrong-speak in classrooms and living spaces (in 2013鈥2014, 49 percent of reports came from UW-La Crosse鈥檚 residence halls, and another 12 percent from classrooms). That is Big Brother at his finest.

For these reasons, the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse is our February 2016 Speech Code of the Month.

If you believe that your college鈥檚 or university鈥檚 policy should be a Speech Code of the Month, please email speechcodes@thefire.org with a link to the policy and a brief description of why you think attention should be drawn to this code. If you are a current college student or faculty member interested in free speech, consider joining the FIREStudent Network, an organization of college faculty members and students dedicated to advancing individual liberties on their campuses.

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share