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蜜桃直播鈥檚 Catherine Sevcenko Warns About U. of Alabama鈥檚 Vague, Overbroad Speech Codes

The University of Alabama (UA) earns a 鈥渞ed light鈥 rating in 蜜桃直播鈥檚 Spotlight database for prohibiting, among other things, 鈥渁ll forms of ... discriminatory or inflammatory language, including, but not limited to, online/electronic, telephone, verbal, non鈥恦erbal, or written communications with the intent to harm or incite.鈥 蜜桃直播 Associate Director of Litigation Catherine Sevcenko argues in an op-ed for the UA student newspaper that this vague and overbroad policy could easily be used to punish a wide range of constitutionally protected speech.
Historically, as Catherine points out, limits on speech have been used to silence unpopular views or unpopular classes of people. For example, 鈥淸i]n 1956, University officials suspended its first black student, Autherine Lucy, 鈥榝or her own safety鈥 due to mob violence and then expelled her when she sued for readmission because the suit 鈥榮landered鈥 the University.鈥
And UA鈥檚 current policies allow for applications that are just as ludicrous. Catherine writes:
[S]ome of the University鈥檚 residence hall policy doesn鈥檛 even make sense. What do administrators mean by a 鈥渘on-verbal ... communication鈥 that is intended to 鈥渉arm鈥? The evil eye? Telepathy? It鈥檚 easy to mock this kind of nonsensical language, but the underlying problem is serious: Administrators can use this overly broad and vague policy to punish speech they simply don鈥檛 like. Any speech that provokes someone else to think, react and engage in a heated discussion is in some sense 鈥渋nflammatory.鈥 It鈥檚 also a fundamental part of any decent education.
The good news, though, is that students who are facing disciplinary charges or censorship under this kind of speech code simply for expressing themselves can fight back, and 蜜桃直播 is happy to help. You can submit a case on our website or email standup@thefire.org to find out what strategy will be most effective for defending free speech rights on your campus鈥攚hether it鈥檚 working with university administrators, bringing public attention to a free speech issue, or . For its own sake and for the benefit of the campus community, UA should revise its speech-restrictive policies now before students have to resort to other measures.
Read the rest of Catherine鈥檚 piece in .
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