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VICTORY: Princeton amends no-contact order policy after 果冻传媒app官方/ADL letter
In a speedy victory for FIREand the Anti-Defamation League, Princeton amended its no-contact order policy on Jan. 26 to conform to parameters we recommended in our joint letter sent the day before. FIREand the ADL wrote Princeton last week to express our shared concern about its continued improper use of no-contact orders and similar 鈥渘o-communication鈥 orders in ways that lead to censorship of student journalists.
While no-contact orders are certainly viable tools to keep students safe from discriminatory harassment and other misconduct, Princeton鈥檚 prior policy allowed any student to request a no-contact order against any other student without even alleging misconduct by the student against whom the order was sought. This led to multiple student journalists receiving these no-contact-type orders in apparent retaliation for their reporting, without any due process from Princeton. Perhaps most disappointingly, Princeton failed to heed 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 warning a year ago about weaponization of these policies to silence pro-Israel journalism on campus.
But Princeton鈥檚 updated policy 鈥 significantly shortened from a to a far more 鈥 appropriately limits the circumstances in which no-contact orders will issue.
Princeton keeps letting students weaponize no-contact orders against student journalists
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FIREand the Anti-Defamation League are calling out a Princeton policy being used to silence the student press
The allows university administrators to issue no-contact orders as part of the penalty if they find a student responsible for misconduct. It also allows administrators to issue an emergency short-term no-communication order 鈥 typically for one day 鈥 until proper review or adjudication of the matter, or during the misconduct investigation when there is concern for an individual鈥檚 safety. The revised policy thus eliminates the due process concerns FIREand the ADL raised just last week regarding how the prior policy allowed students to weaponize no-contact orders to censor student journalists whose coverage they disliked.
President Eisgruber recently that 鈥淸f]ree speech and academic freedom are the lifeblood of any great university and any healthy democracy,鈥 re-committing Princeton to provide students and faculty 鈥渨ith the broadest possible latitude to speak, write, listen, challenge, and learn.鈥 The no-contact order policy change is a good first step to fulfilling that promise.
FIRE will continue to monitor Princeton to ensure it puts the new policy into practice.
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