Table of Contents
User's Guide to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½'s Campus Disinvitation Database
Research & Learn
Welcome to FIREās Campus Disinvitation Database. On this page, you can learn more about what a ādisinvitationā is, how FIREcatalogues these incidents, and how you can use our database to learn more about this troubling phenomenon. For further FIREanalysis, be sure to check out our 2014 Disinvitation Report.
Since our founding in 1999, the FIRE(¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½) has fought the culture of censorship on campus. One worrisome trend undermining open discourse in the academy is the increased push by some students and faculty to ādisinviteā speakers with whom they disagree from campus appearances. While most noticeable around commencement season due to the high-profile status of many commencement speakers, disinvitations occur all yearāand have been steadily increasing over the past 15 years.
Methodology
FIRE researched disinvitation efforts at public and private American institutions from the year 2000 to the present by collecting data from a number of sources, including news accounts and case submissions to FIREand other organizations.
It is important to note that this research is not exhaustive. It would be nearly impossible to compile information on every disinvitation attempt. However, FIREis confident that this data accurately documents a culture of censorship on college campuses over the last 15 years.
Definitions
The term ādisinvitation incidentā is used to describe the controversies on campus that arise throughout the year whenever segments of the campus community demand that an invited speaker not be allowed to speak (as opposed to merely expressing disagreement with, or even protesting, an invited speakerās views or positions). We make a distinction between an attempt to censor a speaker and the actual end result of a speaker not speaking. āDisinvitation incidentsā is the broadest category, including āunsuccessful disinvitation attemptsā and āsuccessful disinvitations.ā
Not only are unsuccessful disinvitation attempts increasing, but so too are successful disinvitations, which fall into three categories:
- Formal disinvitation from the speaking engagement, such as the revocation of Robin Steinbergās invitation to address Harvard Law School students.
- Withdrawal by the speaker in the face of disinvitation demands, as demonstrated by Condoleezza Rice at Rutgers University.
- āHecklerās vetoes,ā in which students or faculty persistently disrupt or entirely prevent the speakersā ability to speak, illustrated by the case of Ray Kelly at Brown University. These incidents are labeled as āsubstantial event disruption.ā
While disinvitations on campus are a year-round phenomenon, controversies surrounding commencement speakers are clustered around the same calendar weeks and generally feature the highest-profile speakers. Accordingly, these incidents typically garner the most publicity. For these reasons, we refer to the time period near graduation as ādisinvitation season.ā
Political Classifications
Disinvitations on campus are usually a response to the perceived nature of a specific political stance rather than a speakerās complete political ideology, meaning, for example, that many of the disinvitation efforts based on a speakerās perceived āconservativeā viewpoints are undertaken against speakers who might self-identify as liberal. A more useful way to classify disinvitation attempts on the basis of politics, therefore, is as coming āfrom the left of the speakerā or āfrom the right of the speaker,ā rather than an assessment based on the speakerās more general political orientation.
For example, students at University of California, Hastings College of the Law urged the administration to disinvite former United States Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, a Democrat, because of her support for policies that allegedly led to the increased deportation of undocumented immigrants. Therefore, although Napolitano does not self-identify as conservative, FIREhas classified her disinvitation attempt as coming āfrom the left of the speaker.ā
How to Use This Database
The Main View
Upon accessing the database, you will find yourself at the master table of disinvitation attempts, which looks like this:
Due to limited space, only select details are presented in the master table. To view more details about a particular incident, including an explanation of the controversy surrounding the speaker and links to media coverage, click āviewā in the āDetailsā column in the corresponding row:
The table is sortable; just click on the column header you want to sort by:
Adding Filters
To find disinvitation incidents based on type, date, school, or a number of other criteria, you can filter the table view so that it displays only those entries. To add a filter, click on the āadd filterā link just above the table and select a criterion to filter by:
Once a filter has been added, you can remove it by clicking the āxā in the filter tag that appears next to the āadd filterā link, or even add an additional filter:
Note: the filtering tool only permits a user to filter by certain criteria. For more in-depth research capability, read on to the next section of this guide.
Searching
A basic keyword search across all fields can be executed by simply entering the chosen keyword(s) into the search box just above the filters:
The database also contains a more advanced search function. To access the advanced search, click on the āSearchā button in the blue bar at the top of the database:
The advanced search permits you to narrow incidents down by a combination of nearly any of the criteria contained in the database, allowing for in-depth and pointed research into areas of specific interest to you:
Submitting a Missing Incident
If you are aware of a disinvitation incident that is not on our list, please let us know! To submit a new incident, click on the āSubmit a Disinvitation Attemptā button in the blue bar at the top of the database, and then click on the link to send us an email.
If you have any further questions about how to use this resource, please donāt hesitate to reach out.