Table of Contents
FIRE's 'Guide to Free Speech on Campus' First Edition
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:
- How can I wage a successful campaign against speech codes at my school?
- 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?
- 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?
- What is the modern history and current status of the United States Supreme Court's view of the nature and scope of academic freedom?
For more information, please read FIRE’s press release celebrating the launch of the Guide to Free Speech on Campus.
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from FIRE.
J. Edgar Hoover and the war on dissent
J. Edgar Hoover turned the FBI into a powerful crime-fighting agency — and one of the greatest threats to free speech in American history.
In defense of anonymity, the guard dog of free expression
Anonymity doesn't protect trolls — it protects everyone from abuse victims to dissidents. That's why attacks on anonymous speech threaten us all.
STATEMENT: ICE tracked down a New York woman who posted information she saw in a newspaper. Why her fight is everyone’s fight.
ICE reportedly warned a Syracuse woman over an Instagram post repeating public news. That's not how free speech works in America today.
The ‘papers, please’ era of the internet will decimate your privacy
Age verification is becoming identity verification. The result won’t be a safer internet — it will be a less private, less free one.