Dialogue in a Divided Nation: Student Perspectives on the Policies and Culture Surrounding Campus Speech

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2020-11-20

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Abstract

Free speech policy on college campuses faces the unique challenge of balancing the allowance of open expression with the protection of a safe, inclusive community. In an effort to address the growing concern of self-censorship and limited civil discourse on college campuses, researchers have conducted nationwide surveys measuring student perception. While these surveys provide valuable insight into understanding general trends in free speech opinions, they fail to explore the motivation and rationale behind these beliefs.

    	This study analyzes comprehensive interview data from 17 Duke undergraduates who shared their thoughts on controversial free speech incidents. It found that interviewees typically demonstrated a strong understanding of the core principles of free speech but failed to differentiate between protected versus unprotected speech; interviewees also revealed poor familiarity with Duke speech policy. Respondents’ perceptions of contentious free speech incidents fell consistently along party lines, but respondents overall demonstrated a nuanced understanding of hate speech and how it differs from other racist/bigoted speech. Finally, interviewees regarded Duke’s speech policy as vague, superficial, and overly subjective. This study leverages students’ sentiments in order to recommend a more comprehensive, concrete speech policy that balances a dedication to open expression with key protections for marginalized students.

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Sommer, Luke (2020). Dialogue in a Divided Nation: Student Perspectives on the Policies and Culture Surrounding Campus Speech. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22254.


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