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Home arrow eBook Categories arrow Media arrow FIRE's Guide to Free Speech on Campus

FIRE's Guide to Free Speech on Campus

Ebook - Media

FIRE's Guide to Free Speech on Campus, Asiaing.comby David French, Greg Lukianoff, and Harvey Silverglate, Foundation for Individual Rights in Education(FIRE), 2004

FIRE’s Guide to Free Speech on Campus focuses on the threat to freedom of expression posed by the imposition of speech codes, under various misleading names, on campuses across the nation. This Guide identifies the most effective arguments against such codes on private, public, and sectarian campuses, and demonstrates how the mere application of rules of legal equality go a long way to reforming current abuses.

Here students will find the vocabulary with which to combat oppressive codes, regulations, and censorship and the answers to such difficult questions as:

  1. How can I wage a successful campaign against speech codes at my school?
  2. How do I respond to the claim that colleges and universities must by law adopt policies that restrict speech in the name of combating “sexual harassment,” “racial harassment,” and other forms of allegedly unlawful discriminatory conduct?
  3. What are the modern history and current status of the United States Supreme Court's view of the nature and scope of the First Amendment's protection of free speech and academic freedom, especially as this concept pertains to college and university campuses?
  4. What is the modern history and current status of the United States Supreme Court's view of the nature and scope of academic freedom?

Download FIRE's Guide to Free Speech on Campus

Pdf format, 545kb, 206pages

Visit FIRE's Guide to Free Speech on Campus Official Website

“FIRE’s Guide to Free Speech on Campus is a welcome and essential part of the effort to defend, preserve, and expand liberty and rights on our nation’s campuses. Students need to know—and administrators and faculty need to relearn—the moral and legal arguments on behalf of robust debate, diversity of viewpoints, individual rights, and academic freedom. This Guide teaches students how to fight back against the double standards and disturbing speech codes that pose such dangers to education in a free society.”
 
Edwin Meese III
Ronald Reagan Distinguished Fellow in Public Policy and Chairman, Center for Legal and Judicial Studies
 
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