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VICTORY: Stanford adopts FIRErecommendation, will no longer notify students accused of engaging in protected speech聽
After months of , Stanford University has revised its , which now better promotes the culture of free expression it the community, and is required to provide under .
Stanford says its PIH Reporting system 鈥渋s focused on providing support for students who have been harmed from bias,鈥 and outlined a process for administrators to reach out to alleged offenders to ask them to engage with submitters in 鈥渞estorative justice鈥-style mediation to resolve the issue. The process came intense scrutiny in January after a student filed a report about a photo of a peer holding Adolf Hilter鈥檚 autobiography, 鈥淢ein Kampf.鈥 indicated administrators were 鈥渋n ongoing conversation with the individuals involved鈥 and were working with the students to 鈥渁ddress鈥 the incident.
We wrote Stanford about how this process seriously chills protected speech and can constitute a punishment in and of itself. We told Stanford it should undertake a cursory review of PIH complaints before notifying the accused student. If the alleged conduct constitutes only protected expression, the university can still support the complainant without notifying or involving the accused.
Stanford administrators have long that the PIH reporting system is 鈥not a judicial or investigative process,鈥 and that undergoing a is voluntary. However, FIREis frequently concerned when administrators ask students to engage in any formal process stemming from their protected speech. That can even include coming in for 鈥渋nformal鈥 or 鈥渆ducational鈥 meetings where the context or subtext suggests punishment could follow. This is because the power differential between students and university administrators with disciplinary authority is so significant that students are less likely to perceive these kinds of 鈥渞equests鈥 as genuinely voluntary. Systematizing these processes like the PIH did is likely to chill students from expressing views for fear of getting pulled into this process.
FIRE was also concerned that the process鈥檚 鈥済oals鈥 鈥 鈥淎cknowledgment of Harm鈥 and 鈥淎ccountability and steps taken towards change鈥 鈥 may have constituted and thought reform.
After an underwhelming Feb. 1 response from Stanford insisting no one was being investigated or punished, FIREremained concerned. Stanford faculty also expressed serious reservations about the system, telling The Wall Street Journal it was creating a culture of fear around speech.
But Stanford would soon be facing even more pressure to protect free expression after the - shoutdown of a federal judge at Stanford Law School in March. Stanford Law School鈥檚 dean forcefully re-committed the law school to free speech, and Stanford鈥檚 president made similar statements. It鈥檚 hard to imagine these developments didn鈥檛 play a role in administrators taking a second look at the PIH reporting system, which FIRElearned was recently revised.
Stanford says it鈥檚 not punishing the student photographed reading 鈥楳ein Kampf.鈥 Here鈥檚 why that鈥檚 not good enough.
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University responds to 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter by insisting that no student is being 鈥減unished or investigated for reading a book,鈥 instead citing concerns raised by other students about a social media photo.
Now, the of the PIH website incorporates the exact change we asked Stanford to make: It reads, 鈥Offending parties are not contacted.鈥 Also, a PIH incident is now as conduct or an incident that occurs outside academic engagement, which alleviates our concern about potential targeting of comments from students or professors germane to classroom discussions. The university additionally will maintain PIH reports in its records, but will use them only for and will keep them separate from anyone鈥檚 disciplinary or academic record 鈥 unless, of course, reports reveal actionable harassment or unlawful discrimination that administrators are legally obligated to share with another office.
While revisions to the PIH reporting system will no longer implicate students for protected speech, offended students won鈥檛 be without resources: They can still receive mental health support and opportunities to engage in restorative practices.
Stanford鈥檚 recent free speech efforts 鈥 including updating its PIH Reporting System 鈥 represents a big win for Stanford students, who can now speak more freely on campus with less fear. Ideally, on this issue, Stanford will be a role model to other colleges and universities that have similar reporting mechanisms.
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