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issues Youth
The concept of youth as innocent beings is a relatively recent phenomenon. From the time of the ancient Greeks and for centuries afterward, children were associated with grossness and lewdness and considered only partially human, more of a financial asset than a vulnerable human being. Infanticide, abandonment and sales into brothels were their common fate. Featured Incidents
» Adviser removed at Calif. high school after challenging principal's censorship (SPLC, July 9, 2008) CALIFORNIA — Administrators removed a journalism adviser from his position at Fallbrook High School after he defended students against two instances of censorship. The Tomahawk, the student newspaper at the Fallbrook, Calif., high school, was first censored in November when it was covering the removal of former superintendent Tom Anthony by the Board of Trustees. Principal Rod King required the paper to remove the story, said David Evans, the adviser. The paper was again censored in May, while it was preparing its final issue of the year. A student wrote an editorial that was critical of federal support of abstinence-only education. In an e-mail to Evans, King said he was "not at all comfortable" with the editorial, saying it was "one-sided" and controversial. The students' petition to the Supreme Court asks the justices to decide whether the Court's major student speech precedents "permit school officials to punish a student for his viewpoint of his speech as long as the speech does not involve a matter of public concern." » Principal threatens to pull funding from student newspaper for covering flag-burning (AP, June 11th, 2008) SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — A high school newspaper in California was disbanded after it published a front-page photo of a student burning an American flag, triggering criticism that the administration was stifling free expression. UPDATE: The Superintendent stepped in and reversed the decision! Read NCAC and American Society for Journalists and Authors letter. » Appeals Court Rules Against Student Free Speech on Internet (Hartford Courant, May 30, 2008) The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York decided that Lewis S. Mills High School did not violate the First Amendment rights of student Avery Doninger by disciplining her for a blog post she wrote off-campus criticizing the school. UPDATE: Doninger to file libel suit against former principal in wake of free speech case » Middle School Play About Bullying Censored (March 4, 2008) A middle school play about bullying is canceled in Sherwood, OR because the principal claims its “content exceeds the maturity of many of [Sherwood Middle School] students.” NCAC discovered this decision was also made in response to parental complaints about homosexual themes in the play. NCAC's Letter letter to the Principal and Superintendent, related articles, and the play itself to see what you think. Incidents & News Visit the following pages to see the latest record of NCAC's work: art Also visit these new archive pages which feature a collection of links to articles, opinion pieces, reports and other resources we have collected over the past two years relating to student expression: Resources
» NCAC Statement on Media Marketing Accountability Act The NCAC expresses its views on the Media Marketing Accountability Act, which aims to respond to concerns about violent or sexual content in entertainment by threatening entertainment companies whose programs and products are considered "inappropriate" for youth. » Not In Front of the Children, by Marjorie Heins
This book studies censorship that has been based on the assumption that minors must be protected from controversial or provocative art, information and ideas.
» NCAC Reviews Recent Youth Censorship Books
A book review on Harmful to Minors: The Perils of Protecting Children From Sex by Judith Levine and The First Amendment and Civil Liability by Robert M. O'Neil.
» Brief NCAC Article on Censors Who Claim to Protect Children Joan E. Bertin posits that children will function better in the world if they are allowed to explore it, with guidance from parents, teachers, and other adults. Books » NCAC's Book Censorship Toolkit A resource guide for dealing with book challenges in schools. » Is Harry Potter Evil? Acclaimed author and NCAC Board Member Judy Blume writes in The New York Times about the Harry Potter book-banning trend, and why books that excite children should be promoted, not censored. » Don't Cave In to the Book Banners NCAC Executive Director Joan Bertin writes in Newsday about the never-ending battle between those who claim to protect children from harm and the books those children want to read. » Censors and Schools: The Battle Over Children's Literature A panel discussion, hosted by the NCAC on Sept. 28, 2000, on censorship of children's literature. » NCAC Defends Books in Trouble A status report of books being challenged or banned. » Religious Right Aims to Pit Parents Against Teachers in Book Censorship Battles The Religious Right insists that public school officials have some nefarious scheme for subverting "parental rights," primarily by choosing curriculum and other material that are at odds with their moral values. Internet » December 19th, 2006 Student Online Expression: What Do the Internet and MySpace Mean for Students' First Amendment Rights? (First Amendment Center)First Forum report by David L. Hudson Jr., First Amendment Center research attorney. » The Internet and Education: A Close Fit In this excerp from the February 21, 1997 issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education, Harvard President Neil Rudenstine addresses the revolutionary impact of the Internet on scholarship, teaching and learning.
» Netizen Report on Religious Right Connections to Major Internet Filters » NCAC Urges Internet Online Summit to Respect First Amendment Rights The NCAC press release urging participants of the Internet Online Summit, a conference dominated by an effort to restrict children's access to certain kinds of materials on the Internet, to respect First Amendment rights. » NCAC Letter to Vice President Gore About Internet Censorship The NCAC expresses its concern to Vice President Gore regarding his endorsement of the "Parents' Protection Page," an Internet tool that facilitates Internet censorship. » NCAC Statement on Legislative Efforts to Restrict Internet Access in Schools
The NCAC's statement regarding Senator John McCain's legislative proposal to limit students' access to "indecent" material on the Internet.
» LGBT Resisting Homphobic Attacks on Education and the Arts
A report on homophobic attacks on education and the arts and how to resist them.
Schools and Libraries » Censorship In Our Schools and Libraries A primer on how to prepare for a censorship dispute before it arises. Related: NCAC's Book Censorship Toolkit: A resource guide for dealing with book challenges in schools. » NCAC Counters Censorship In Our Schools and Libraries Information on the NCAC program that helps educators, librarians, parents, and "ordinary" citizens fight efforts to censor materials in schools and libraries. » NCAC Comes to Defense of Teachers and Educators Under Fire From Censors Without the efforts of persevering educators, our kids' schooling would become bland and boring, leaving them to figure out answers to life's hard questions alone. Sexual Content » Art and Nudity A statement on artistic works containing nudity and they myth that such works harm children. » Sex Education
Abstinence-only Education: Why First Amendment Supporters Should Oppose It
An NCAC statement paper on abstinence-only education.
» Sex and the Censors A review of sex-censorship cases. » Joint Statement Opposing Government Censorship of Sex Ed The NCAC and 34 other free speech groups released this statement regarding its public education campaign to oppose the Coingressional re-authorization of federal funding for abstinence-only education. » Surgeon General's Report Recommends Comprehensive Sex Ed The NCAC applauded the U.S. Surgeon General's Report on sexual health and behavior that called for comprehensive sexuality education to begin early in life. » Opposition to Censored Sex-Ed Grows A Human Rights Watch study of abstinence-only-until-marriage programs in Texas documents the risks to young people from withholding life-saving HIV prevention information. » A Brief NCAC Statement Championing For Comprehensive Sex Ed Joan E. Bertin boils down the arguments for why abstinence-only sex education doesn't cut it. » Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Word The Executive Coordinator of Network for Family Life Education writes on the strange campagin afoot to remove the S-word from our lexicon. » Sex and Censorship: Dangers to Minors and Others? A review of the Sex and Censorship seminar sponsored by the NCAC in June 1998. Violence » Joint Letter to American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Regarding its Misstatements About Media Violence
The NCAC, among other organizations, respond to the AAP's misstatements on the correlation of viewing media violence and violent behavior.
» Testimony of NCAC Executive Director Before Task Force on Youth Violence and the Entertainment Industry
Joan E. Bertin, Executive Director of the NCAC, delivered this testimony before the Task Force on Youth Violence and the Entertainment Industry on October 6, 1999.
» Political Candidates Seek to Broaden Their Appeal, Picking Fantasy Violence as Their Target Vice-President Gore, Senator Joseph Lieberman, and Lynne Cheney, blamed Hollywood, popular music and video-games for corrupting youth, at hearings on a Federal Trade Commission report chaired by Senator John McCain. » Violent Imagery and the First Amendment Although some people draw a distinction between "gratuitous" violence and violence which is used to convey a message, the First Amendment does not make such a distinction. |
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