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University of Georgia Student Paper Reports on School's 'Yellow Light' Rating
Wednesday鈥檚 edition of The Red & Black, the student newspaper at the University of Georgia (UGA), has an on the school鈥檚 鈥測ellow light鈥 speech code rating. Based on an interview with Samantha Harris, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 director of policy research, Dillon Richards鈥 article explains UGA鈥檚 problematic policies, which include a 48-hour waiting period for approval to demonstrate anywhere outside of two designated 鈥渇ree speech zones.鈥 The university鈥檚 legal counsel declined to comment, leaving Jan Barham, the associate dean of students, to defend the policies. Barham revealed once again how hard it is to explain why limiting speech on universities campuses is a good idea.
Barham, like her fellow administrator at Modesto Junior College, invoked the magic words 鈥渢ime, place, and manner鈥 to justify limiting students鈥 expression. She further explained: 鈥淭he 48 hours is there because we don鈥檛 know what other factors are happening on campus that will take our energy and our time,鈥 adding that her office has never denied 鈥渓egitimate requests to assemble.鈥
Why should Barham鈥檚 energy and time be used up if other people want to express their views? I have no idea.
My colleague Sam explained that a waiting period stifles counter-demonstrations and the exchange of views that a university is supposed to promote. Citing the incident earlier this year at the University of Alabama in which a pro-choice student group was prevented from handing out leaflets in response to a pro-life rally, Sam said: 鈥淭he problem with prohibiting spontaneous demonstrations like that is that sometimes the immediacy of the message is part of how a protester or a demonstrator will communicate with their audience.鈥 She added that making a group with a counter-message wait 鈥渒ind of waters down your message and the tools you really need to connect to your audience.鈥
Barham also commented that the university has not denied any 鈥渓egitimate鈥 requests to assemble. As Sam clarified: 鈥淚鈥檓 not saying that [Barham] is not making those decisions in a reasonable fashion, ... [b]ut, you know, when you look at the law, the law requires ... clear, objective criteria, and the policy doesn鈥檛 supply that.鈥 In particular, UGA does not explain what 鈥渓egitimate鈥 means. online dictionary has three primary definitions for legitimate: 1) allowed according to rules or laws; 2) real, accepted, or official; 3) fair or reasonable. Presumably Barham is using legitimate in the sense of 鈥渇air or reasonable.鈥 But what if her successor decides that the right to assemble should be limited to views that are 鈥渁ccepted or official?鈥 Under the current policy, students would have no recourse. Any speech policy without objective standards is based on a 鈥渢rust us鈥 foundation, which is the same as no foundation at all, as Sam explained in this post about Rice University鈥檚 鈥渞ed light鈥 rating.
Barham issued UGA鈥檚 current policy (PDF) on the First Amendment, which is unequivocal: 鈥淣o rights are more highly regarded at the University of Georgia than the [F]irst [A]mendment guarantees of freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and the right to assemble peaceably.鈥 FIREapplauds UGA鈥檚 commitment to free expression -- in theory, if not currently in practice. As Sam put it, 鈥淸I]t would be super exciting if the university was interested in becoming a green light, and we would love to work with students and administrators toward that goal.鈥
Dean Barham, call us!
Image: Brooks Hall on the University of Georgia campus -
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