果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

'Unlearning Liberty': Harassment Codes Often Abused to Censor

Last month, when the Departments of Justice and Education joined together to mandate that virtually every college and university in the United States adopt speech codes that violate the First Amendment and decades of legal precedent, many were justifiably shocked. UCLA law professor and popular legal blogger Eugene Volokh said that the new mandate creates 鈥渁 very dangerous situation,鈥 Washington Post columnist George Will wrote that it will encourage 鈥渃ensorship regimes鈥 on campus, and Atlantic columnist and civil libertarian Wendy Kaminer didn't mince words when she called it 鈥渁n educational nightmare.鈥

Less surprising, perhaps, than the federal government's attempt to mandate unconstitutional speech codes on nearly every college campus is the mechanism it has chosen to do so. The mandate comes in the form of a findings letter and agreement among the DOJ, ED, and the University of Montana (UMT) to address several allegations of sexual assault on the university's Missoula campus. As part of the mandate, which expressly touts itself as a 鈥渂lueprint for colleges and universities throughout the country,鈥 the feds write that in order to fulfill its requirements under Title IX, UMT must adopt a sexual harassment policy that prohibits 鈥渁ny unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature,鈥 including 鈥渧erbal conduct鈥 (read: speech).

For those who have read FIREPresident Greg Lukianoff's recent book 鈥淯nlearning Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate,鈥 it should come as no surprise that the government would use harassment rationales as its vehicle to combat speech that it disfavors. As Greg writes in the book, since campus speech codes began being adopted in the late 1980s and early '90s, 鈥淭he most common legal theory behind [them] was one that characterized some kinds of protected speech as punishable harassment.鈥

鈥淭he story of harassment codes on campus is largely one of universities brazenly ignoring the right to free speech."

For example, a Northern Arizona University speech code from 2005 included within its definition of prohibited harassment 鈥渟tereotyping鈥 and 鈥渘egative comments or jokes.鈥 Another harassment code at Drexel University from 2006 prohibited 鈥渋nconsiderate jokes鈥 and 鈥渋nappropriately directed laughter.鈥 And, eschewing any attempt at providing students an idea of what conduct might be prohibited, a harassment policy at Florida Gulf Coast University from 2007 prohibited simply 鈥渆xpressions deemed inappropriate.鈥 Given its lack of success in the court of law and the court of public opinion, one might expect that the 鈥減rotected speech as harassment鈥 legal theory would have died out by now. But as Greg points out:, 鈥淭he story of harassment codes on campus is largely one of universities brazenly ignoring the right to free speech and the law concerning harassment as they pass speech codes that, when challenged, are almost laughed out of court.鈥 鈥淪ince 1989, there have been nearly two dozen court cases involving campus speech codes,鈥 writes Greg. 鈥淎lmost all of them have challenged a substantially overbroad harassment code, and virtually all of these challenges have been successful.鈥

The 1989 decision Greg is referring to is a case out of the Eastern District of Michigan, Doe v. University of Michigan, the first legal challenge to a speech code of its kind. In that case, a federal district court permanently enjoined the University of Michigan from enforcing its Policy on Discrimination and Discriminatory Harassment on the grounds that it was overbroad on its face and as applied. In addition, the court found that the policy was so vague that enforcing it would violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The policy prohibited, among other things, 鈥淸a]ny behavior, verbal or physical, that ... [c]reates an intimidating, hostile, or demeaning environment for educational pursuits, employment or participation in University sponsored extra-curricular activities.鈥 FIREitself has coordinated litigation that resulted in the defeat of many university harassment codes. Perhaps most on point with the federal government's new edict is the United Statess Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit's decision in DeJohn v. Temple University (3d Cir. 2008), which saw the defeat of Temple University's sexual harassment policy prohibiting 鈥済eneralized sexist remarks and behavior.鈥

The Third Circuit struck down this policy on First Amendment grounds, finding it to be impermissibly overbroad because it 鈥減rovide[d] no shelter for core protected speech.鈥

In taking its lead from colleges and universities that for years have ignored a continuous string of legal defeats for overbroad and vague harassment policies, the federal government is setting up its new national speech code for a similar fate. The fate is avoidable, however. All that the federal government has to do is adopt the definition of sexual harassment in the educational context already provided by the Supreme Court. In Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education (1999) the Court defined student-on-student harassment in the educational context as unwelcome behavior directed at a person because of his or her race or gender that is 鈥渟o severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities.鈥

Bingo. A workable definition. As Greg writes in "Unlearning Liberty," 鈥淭he Davis standard expertly balances legitimate concerns about actual discrimination and harassment with protection of free speech, while not overburdening universities with unrealistic obligations to police every aspect of their students' lives.鈥

But the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (the office that signed the new federal speech code mandate and is tasked with investigating Title IX complaints) has repeatedly refused to accept this definition, instead opting for a broader, unconstitutional definition that Greg writes in his book 鈥渉as effectively encouraged campus officials to punish speech they simply dislike.鈥

鈥淭he most pervasive myth about campus censorship and speech codes is that this war was fought long ago and free speech won.鈥

The dangers posed by college and universities' (and now the federal government's) repeated disregard for the First Amendment when drafting their harassment policies are not hypothetical. In "Unlearning Liberty," Greg devotes a whole section to these dangers. He tells the story of Keith John Sampson, a student at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, who was found guilty of racial harassment for merely reading a book about the Ku Klux Klan in public. (Ironically, the book was about the defeat of the Klan when they marched on Notre Dame in 1924.) There's also the student at the University of New Hampshire who was kicked out of his dorm room and forced to live in his car after being found to have violated the school's harassment policy, simply for making a flyer that poked fun at the 鈥渇reshman 15.鈥 And, more recently, in 2011, a University of Denver professor was declared guilty of sexual harassment just because the content of his class, 鈥淭he Domestic and International Consequences of the Drug War,鈥 was deemed too salacious.

鈥淭he most pervasive myth about campus censorship and speech codes,鈥 writes Greg, 鈥渋s that this war was fought long ago and free speech won.鈥 The feds' speech code mandate confirms Greg's argument that this myth is indeed just that: a myth. The mandate has reawakened the American public to the threats to free speech on campus posed by overly broad harassment codes. But in order for citizens, students, faculty, alumni, administrators, trustees, and citizens to successfully fight back against this and other violations of rights on campus, they should understand how we got here by checking out "Unlearning Liberty."

"Unlearning Liberty: Campus Censorship and the End of American Debate" is available in print, digital, and audiobook format from Amazon.com. All proceeds from the book directly support FIREand its mission.

Recent Articles

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

Share