Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America
Free speech is in crisis on America’s campuses. Rather than refute an idea with which he disagrees, today’s college student demands censorship. At the slightest hint of offense, the weak-willed administrator complies and disinvites a speaker while a close-minded protestor disrupts a lecture. This disturbing trend threatens the very purpose of education, to expose the mind to various points of view. The sad message today’s students learn: shouting delivers results.

This short booklet offers a timeless defense of free expression, first authored at Yale University in 1975 and all too relevant in the current climate.

Like many higher education institutions then and now, Yale had faced protest and censorship. In response to that free speech crisis, a faculty-student committee chaired by renowned historian C. Van Woodard composed the “Woodward Report.” Its wonderful prose boldly defends the right for all to “think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable.” The Woodard Report is a model for all those who seek to stand up for the civil exchange of ideas and against the forces of censorship.

In addition the Woodard Report itself, readers will find an introduction contextualizing the report’s history and exegesis of the text by Judge José A. Cabranes and Yale School Professor Kate Stith.
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Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America
Free speech is in crisis on America’s campuses. Rather than refute an idea with which he disagrees, today’s college student demands censorship. At the slightest hint of offense, the weak-willed administrator complies and disinvites a speaker while a close-minded protestor disrupts a lecture. This disturbing trend threatens the very purpose of education, to expose the mind to various points of view. The sad message today’s students learn: shouting delivers results.

This short booklet offers a timeless defense of free expression, first authored at Yale University in 1975 and all too relevant in the current climate.

Like many higher education institutions then and now, Yale had faced protest and censorship. In response to that free speech crisis, a faculty-student committee chaired by renowned historian C. Van Woodard composed the “Woodward Report.” Its wonderful prose boldly defends the right for all to “think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable.” The Woodard Report is a model for all those who seek to stand up for the civil exchange of ideas and against the forces of censorship.

In addition the Woodard Report itself, readers will find an introduction contextualizing the report’s history and exegesis of the text by Judge José A. Cabranes and Yale School Professor Kate Stith.
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Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America

Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America

Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America

Campus Speech in Crisis: What the Yale Experience Can Teach America

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Overview

Free speech is in crisis on America’s campuses. Rather than refute an idea with which he disagrees, today’s college student demands censorship. At the slightest hint of offense, the weak-willed administrator complies and disinvites a speaker while a close-minded protestor disrupts a lecture. This disturbing trend threatens the very purpose of education, to expose the mind to various points of view. The sad message today’s students learn: shouting delivers results.

This short booklet offers a timeless defense of free expression, first authored at Yale University in 1975 and all too relevant in the current climate.

Like many higher education institutions then and now, Yale had faced protest and censorship. In response to that free speech crisis, a faculty-student committee chaired by renowned historian C. Van Woodard composed the “Woodward Report.” Its wonderful prose boldly defends the right for all to “think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable.” The Woodard Report is a model for all those who seek to stand up for the civil exchange of ideas and against the forces of censorship.

In addition the Woodard Report itself, readers will find an introduction contextualizing the report’s history and exegesis of the text by Judge José A. Cabranes and Yale School Professor Kate Stith.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781594039201
Publisher: Encounter Books
Publication date: 09/27/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 88
File size: 465 KB

About the Author

José A. Cabranes, a judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, was general counsel of Yale University when appointed to the federal bench in 1979. He thereafter served long terms as a trustee of Yale, Colgate University, and, most recently, his undergraduate alma mater, Columbia University.

Kate Stith, the Lafayette S. Foster Professor of Law at Yale Law School, served as a trustee (and as vice chair of the Board of Trustees) of her alma mater, Dartmouth College.

Nathaniel Zelinsky is a J.D. candidate at Yale Law School. He holds degrees from Yale College and the University of Cambridge.
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