New York University: Suppression of Discussion of Mohammed Cartoons

Case Materials

Media Coverage

  • "Speech on Campus After 9/11: Less Free than It Used to Be?," Jennifer Van Bergen, FindLaw Legal News and Commentary, May 25, 2006: Universities have traditionally been places where debate and the free exchange of ideas have been welcomed. But after 9/11, that may be changing -- as some recent, troubling incidents suggest.
  • "'Free speech' cries ring hollow on college campuses and beyond," Nat Hentoff, USA Today, April 19, 2006: Century College's administration — and indeed, all who wither amid such free speech controversies — should welcome a challenge from Oliver Wendell Holmes: "If there is any principle of the Constitution that more imperatively calls for attachment than any other, it is the principle of free thought — not free thought for those who agree with us, but freedom for the thought that we hate."
  • "N.Y.U. bans Danish cartoons’ display at campus talk," Chad Smith, The Villager (New York), April 12, 2006: “N.Y.U. is a university. A university is a place for free and unfettered discussion in the pursuit if knowledge,” said Jonathan Leaf, a speaker at Wednesday night’s event. Leaf, a former editor at New York Press, resigned from his post at the newspaper after its owners denied the editorial staff the right to reprint the Danish cartoons.
  • "Admin caves on cartoons," Eric Moskowitz, Washington Square News (New York Univ.), April 3, 2006: But NYU is a private university, not a newspaper or a government agency. There are no trade-offs here. It is an enclave, a fortress — a sanctuary of intellectual freedom unbeholden to any intellectual hegemony (or should be). If you are a prospective student and you think you will study at this university (or any other for that matter) and not be offended by anything, you’ve got another thing coming. As Greg Lukianoff, a panelist and the president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education said, “No one has a right to not be offended.”
  • "NYU on Mohammed Cartoons: Discuss, but Don't Look," Nathan Burchfiel, Cybercast News Service, April 3, 2006: But Greg Lukianoff, president of the free speech advocacy group Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, said the decision to ban the cartoons was wrong. The university's position that students could discuss the cartoons without seeing them was "one of the most frustrating and asinine arguments that I've heard," Lukianoff said.
  • "NYU Knuckles," New York Post, April 2, 2006: As the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education noted, NYU's decision is "both chilling and absurd. The fact that expression might provoke a strong reaction is a reason to protect it—not an excuse to punish it."
  • "Cartoons Discussed But Not Shown At NYU Event," Bradley Hope, The New York Sun, March 30, 2006