Columbia Free Speech Alliance

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About the Chicago Principles on Free Expression

The “Chicago Statement” refers to the free speech policy statement produced by the Committee on Freedom of Expression at the University of Chicago. In July of 2014, University of Chicago President Robert J. Zimmer and Provost Eric D. Isaacs tasked the Committee with “articulating the University’s overarching commitment to free, robust, and uninhibited debate and deliberation among all members of the University’s community.”

Alumni take up the fight for free speech — and you can help!

As campuses grow more hostile to free expression, it may be up to alumni to tip the scales in favor of individual rights. Long after alumni leave campus, they remain some of higher education’s most powerful constituents. Now, with help from FIRE and the newly launched Alumni Free Speech Alliance, they are beginning to rise up on behalf of free speech.

Five ways university presidents can prove their commitment to free speech

Threats to free speech and academic freedom on campus constantly change: One year, it’s speech codes and federal government overreach that present the greatest danger. The next, it could be speaker disinvitations and heckler’s vetoes.

Columbia Free Speech Alliance statement on student protest, hate speech and violence

Although we fully support free speech and students’ right to protest, there are legitimate limits. According to the First Amendment, hate speech is protected with narrow exceptions, as identified by the Supreme Court, “including but not limited to speech that constitutes unlawful incitement, true threats, intimidation, or discriminatory harassment.” (TheFire.org: The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression).