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Celebrating Freedom of Expression

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Jesse King

Two events coming to 91桃色 this spring鈥攂oth open to the public鈥攗nderscore the University鈥檚 commitment to free speech.

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A wide shot of the 91桃色 campus, with the Mary Reed building in the background.

Photo courtesy of Dylan Lindsey.听

Higher education is a place for people of all backgrounds to learn, question, and pursue truth together. At the 91桃色, that work is grounded in a commitment to free expression, pluralism, and academic freedom. In a recent newsletter, Chancellor Jeremy Haefner championed academic freedom as particularly vital to higher education.听

鈥淎cademic freedom is a bedrock principle that supports everything we do at the University,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淲hen we protect this value, it becomes possible for our community to hold dialogue across differences, recognize the humanity in others, persuade audiences through evidence and facts, and ask challenging questions through free inquiry.鈥澨

To that end, 91桃色 is hosting two different events on free expression at the Cable Center this spring. Both events are free and open to the public. Keep scrolling to learn more and register.

Live Taping: 鈥楢dvisory Opinions鈥 Podcast With Sarah Isgur and David French

The Cable Center is hosting journalist Sarah Isgur and New York Times columnist David French for a live taping of their podcast, 鈥淎dvisory Opinions,鈥 on April 21. Isgur, an attorney, was a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Justice during the first Trump Administration and is now a senior editor at The Dispatch, a conservative media outlet. French is a former attorney and political commentator whose work has also appeared in The Dispatch, National Review, and The Atlantic. 鈥淎dvisory Opinions鈥 is a twice-weekly legal podcast from The Dispatch in which Isgur and French analyze politics, policy, and culture from a conservative perspective. The taping at the Cable Center will run from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., and Isgur and French will participate in other events across campus that day. You can register for the taping .

The Future of the American University: An Evening With Lee Bollinger

Lee Bollinger, president emeritus of Columbia University, will visit the Cable Center on May 5 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. for a conversation about the future of American universities (you can register ). Bollinger, a renowned scholar on free expression, was the president of Columbia University from 2002 to 2023, and a faculty member at Columbia Law School. Previously, he served as president of the University of Michigan. In 2003, Bollinger was the defendant in the Supreme Court case Grutter v. Bollinger, which ruled colleges could consider race in the admissions process as a means of promoting campus diversity鈥攁 precedent the Court overturned 20 years later.听

Bollinger has published 12 books, both independently and with fellow scholars like Geoffrey R. Stone of the University of Chicago Law School. His latest is 鈥淯niversity: A Reckoning,鈥 which examines how the structure of modern universities both benefits them and leaves them vulnerable. Bollinger argues that universities are key to preserving democracy and that academic freedom must be viewed as an integral part of the First Amendment.

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