2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11577-020-00713-z
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Is Free Speech in Danger on University Campus? Some Preliminary Evidence from a Most Likely Case

Abstract: Although universities play a key role in questions of free speech and political viewpoint diversity, they are often associated with the opposite of a free exchange of ideas: a proliferation of restrictive campus speech codes, violent protests against controversial speakers and even the firing of inconvenient professors. For some observers these trends on university campuses are a clear indicator of the dire future for freedom of speech. Others view these incidents as scandalized singular events and regard camp… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…One could transpose this “projection argument” into the ideological left–right continuum by roughly equating the conservative right with a preference for social order and the progressive left with political tolerance. But a stream of recent research suggests that equating only one political side with political (in)tolerance is empirically untenable (Crawford and Pilanski 2014 ; Revers and Traunmüller 2020 ).…”
Section: What Drives the Subjective Costs Of Free Expression?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One could transpose this “projection argument” into the ideological left–right continuum by roughly equating the conservative right with a preference for social order and the progressive left with political tolerance. But a stream of recent research suggests that equating only one political side with political (in)tolerance is empirically untenable (Crawford and Pilanski 2014 ; Revers and Traunmüller 2020 ).…”
Section: What Drives the Subjective Costs Of Free Expression?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Against the background of these debates, it is curious that political science has not paid more attention to the question of whether and why citizens think they can express themselves freely. While recent work has begun to investigate “campus cancel culture” (e.g., Revers and Traunmüller 2020 ; Traunmüller 2022 ; Norris 2021 ; Kaufmann 2021 ) and has looked into the democratic effects of hate speech regulation (e.g., Van Spanje and De Vreese 2015 , Jacobs and Van Spanje 2021 ) the more fundamental question of what explains citizens’ subjective freedom of speech remains largely unanswered (but see Gibson 1992 , 1993 and Gibson and Sutherland 2020 for the United States).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Against the background of these debates, it is curious that political science has not paid more attention to the question of whether and why citizens think they can express themselves freely. While recent work has begun to investigate "campus cancel culture" (e.g., Revers and Traunmüller 2020;Traunmüller 2022;Norris 2021;Kaufmann 2021) and has looked into the democratic effects of hate speech regulation (e.g., Van Spanje and De Vreese 2015, Jacobs and Van Spanje 2021) the more fundamental question of what explains citizens' subjective freedom of speech remains largely unanswered (but see Gibson 1992, 1993and Gibson and Sutherland 2020 for the United States).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%