skip to content

Faculty of Philosophy

 

Free Speech on Campus

14 March 2017 - 7.45 pm to 9.15 pm

Bateman Auditorium. Gonville and Caius College

Free entry


Speakers:

Dr Victoria Bateman, Faculty of Economics / Gonville and Caius
Prof. Rae Langton, Faculty of Philosophy / Newnham
Ella Whelan, Spiked magazine
Srishti Krishnamoorthy-Cavell, Faculty of English / Newnham

The apparent threats to free speech are both internal and external. Students' Union officials have banned songs ('Blurred Lines' at Edinburgh and Leeds) and societies (the Nietzsche Club at UCL) and have attempted to ban speakers (Germaine Greer at Cardiff and Cambridge). Universities themselves have restricted speech: for instance, Christ Church in Oxford recently banned a debate on abortion in response to student pressure. Recent 'Prevent' legislation together with existing legislation (such as the Public Order Act) has created further restrictions on which speakers a university can invite and on what they can say if they ever get there. And all of this takes place in the context of increasing government surveillance and intrusion into private life.

That at least is how it might look. But are the threats to free speech more apparent than real? And if they are real, could they in fact be appropriate responses to well-motivated concerns? What is the value of free speech itself? Do we serve these purposes well by insisting on protecting it at almost any cost?

Three expert speakers will speak on these topics before discussing them first with one another and then with the audience. The event will last for about 90 minutes. Entrance is free and all are welcome.

For queries contact Dr Arif Ahmed, Faculty of Philosophy (.

Date: 
Tuesday, 14 March, 2017 - 19:45 to 21:15