Still Looking for Answers from Phi Beta Kappa
by Samantha Harris
December 14, 2005
FIRE recently wrote a letter to John Churchill, secretary of the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in which we ask the organization to stand behind its stated commitment to freedom of expression by addressing the issue of repressive speech codes at its member institutions. In a recent
article in The Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription required), Churchill responded that although Phi Beta Kappa is “interested in freedom of inquiry and freedom of expression,” the society does not "undertake that kind of investigative activity.”
Moreover, all the policies highlighted in
FIRE’s letter to Phi Beta Kappa are readily available online. Given Phi Beta Kappa’s intensive membership application process, it is hard to believe that the minimal research necessary to uncover blatant censorship and repression would really be such a hardship to the society. So what’s really holding it back?