Table of Contents
How Students Made a Difference for Liberty in 2009
For the past few days FIRE has been looking back over our list of accomplishments in 2009. That list would not be complete without mentioning the students who have worked so hard to make their campuses more free.
- At the College of William & Mary, former FIRE intern and Campus Freedom Network member Braum Katz led a reform effort from within the student government as Student Assembly Secretary of Student Rights to revise all constitutionally problematic speech codes. In October, William & Mary eliminated the last of its troublesome policies and FIRE officially gave the college's policies a green-light rating in Spotlight, our speech code database.
- Cornell University has seen its share of illiberalism regarding free speech. Fortunately, former FIRE intern and CFN member John Cetta has been faithfully working through student government and The Cornell Daily Sun, carefully articulating a cogent defense of freedom of association and freedom of speech, to defend these essential rights for all Cornell students. His work has already led to the rejection of one bad policy proposal, and more students are rallying to the defense of liberty on Cornell's campus.
- The Breeze, the student paper at James Madison University, picked up on FIRE's concerns over an absurdly broad policy prohibiting "lewd, indecent...expression" even when off campus, which earned the university a designation as our Speech Code of the Month for October. Student and current CFN member John Scott followed up with an investigatory op-ed on the policy. Pressure from FIRE and JMU students brought about the reform of the policy in late October.
- The University of North Texas eliminated its "Free Speech and Public Assembly Policy," which restricted free expression to six small areas of the campus and required reservations two days in advance plus approval from the Dean of Students. The policy change came after FIRE wrote to the university and the UNT Free Speech Coalition, a group of UNT students dedicated to securing the right to free expression on the UNT campus, met with UNT President Gretchen Bataille.
These examples show how active students, empowered with knowledge about their rights and FIRE's resources, can make a difference for liberty on campus. We invite students interested in working for liberty on their campuses in 2010 to and send us an e-mail.
Recent Articles
Get the latest free speech news and analysis from FIRE.
Outside a New Jersey immigration detention center, reporting on protests may cost you a hospital visit
FIRE continues to survey and report on violations of individual rights, making sure protesters and journalists alike do not face punishment for exercising their First Amendment rights.
New Jersey school board shuts down speaker for discussing his own ethics complaint
FIRE sent a letter to a New Jersey school board that apparently decided public discussion of complaints against it is only acceptable when the board likes what’s being said.
Ida B. Wells: Journalist, activist, civil rights icon, and free speech hero
In 1892, a mob destroyed a Memphis newspaper after it published an anti lynching editorial. Through death threats and violence, they tried to erase journalist Ida B. Wells’s message. Instead, they made her fight impossible to ignore.
Victory: Wisconsin school board backs away from ban on criticism during public comment
Residents do not need to agree with public officials to speak at a government meeting.