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All content © 1999 - 2006 The National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC).
Information presented here may be freely redistributed in its entirety,
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the written permission of the National Coalition Against Censorship. UPDATED AUGUST 28 2008
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Resource Resources on Civil Liberties and Dissent at the Upcoming Conventions Public Eye has put together resource pages on civil liberties and the right to dissent. The collection of documents is being unveiled to remind us that protests of government policies, such as those at the political conventions this summer in Denver and Minneapolis, are protected by the Bill of Rights, unless there are specific criminal acts for which specific individuals can be charged. Caging demonstrators, clearing streets with preventative detention sweeps, and indiscriminate arrests violate the spirit and the letter of the Constitution of the United States.
news NCAC’s The Knowledge Project: Censorship & Science files Amicus brief in Supreme Court In August 2008, The Knowledge Project filed an Amicus brief in Wyeth v. Levine, a case whose important First Amendment implications include the public’s access to information on health risks of marketed drugs.
Censorship News #107 A Pig-Headed Reading of the Law Smithfield Foods, the world’s largest producer of pork products, has filed a lawsuit against the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) alleging that the union’s advocacy violates The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), a federal law designed to combat organized crime. newS Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, Native Son by Richard Wright, and Brave New World by Alodus Huxley were pulled from high school classrooms in Appling County, GA, following complaints by a local minister who objected to language and "mature content" in the books. Students can check the books out of the district's Media Center only if they have signed written permission. NCAC, ABFFE, and the ACLU of Georgia sent a letter to the school board opposing the ban. Click on the link below to read the joint letter, as well as a response from Appling High School English teacher, Mary Ann Ellis.
news Violence in Video Games: heavy-handed legislation persists New York State once again passed an ill-considered video game law. It’s now up to the Governor to sign or veto it. Read NCAC and NYCLU’s joint letter here.
news An independent analysis of network news coverage finds that "Americans are getting about 'two minutes of Iraq coverage, per network, per week.'" Through the first half of 2008, the three major news networks have featured only 181 weekday minutes of coverage, a sharp decline from over 1,100 minutes last year.
news and commentary Surrendering Intellectual Freedom Under relentless pressure from some of its major donors, the Spertus Museum in Chicago closes Imaginary Coordinates, an exhibition about maps and mapping.
commentary Free Speech in Virtual Worlds: An interview with NCAC's Arts Program Director, Svetlana Mintcheva
action NCAC Voices Opposition to "Ideological Exclusion" NCAC and nine other academic and free expression groups filed an amicus brief in an important free speech and academic freedom case now pending in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The case involves a provision of the USA PATRIOT ACT — the "ideological exclusion provision" — which gives the government license to prevent foreigners from entering the United States if the government thinks their views are "irresponsible."
Protect Science Whistleblowers NCAC has joined with the Union of Concerned Scientists and other groups in calling for legal protections for scientists in federal agencies who speak out about issues of public concern like fraud, waste, corruption, as well as health and safety risks. Read a statement signed by over 50 organizations across the political spectrum in support of whistleblower protections for scientists.
action Author Julia Alvarez Speaks Out Against Censorship Following parents’ objections to sexual themes in Julia Alvarez’s How the García Girls Lost Their Accents, the book was banned from Johnston County, NC, classrooms and school libraries. NCAC interviewed Alvarez, asking about her reactions to the book ban and her experiences with censorship.
Publications In Censoring Culture: Contemporary Threats to Free Expression, Svetlana Mintcheva — head of NCAC's Arts Advocacy Program — and art historian Robert Atkins bring together the latest thinking from art historians, cultural theorists, legal scholars, and psychoanalysts, as well as first-person accounts by artists and advocates, to give us a comprehensive understanding of censorship in a new century. You can purchase a copy now in the NCAC Store. Click here to read the table of contents and introduction. |
Convention Watch News and Resources on Free Speech and the 2008 Elections
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