Filtre par catégorie 'University' contenant 7 postes menuTrouver des sujets par mot-clés Academia (2)Access (18)Africa (9)Anonymity (8)Antisemitism (1)Arab Spring (5)Art (14)Article 19 (2)Atheism (1)Australia (4)Blasphemy (16)Blogger (4)Books (2)Brazil (4)Buddhism (1)Burma (2)Canada (2)Celebrity (5)Censorship (33)Charlie Hebdo (2)Child abuse (1)China (10)Christianity (13)Civility (33)Colonialism (1)Copyright (10)Corruption (3)Defamation (27)Democracy (27)Denialism (3)Denmark (2)Discrimination (9)Education (19)Egypt (1)Europe (5)Exclusion (1)Facebook (4)Film (1)Finland (1)France (8)Freedom (44)Genocide (7)Germany (10)Google (5)Governance (10)Hate speech (22)Hinduism (1)History (19)Homosexuality (4)Humour (2)Hungary (1)Hunger strike (1)India (10)Internet (43)Internet companies (1)Islam (17)Israel (1)Japan (2)Journalism (25)Kenya (3)Knowledge (30)Language (8)Latin America (5)Law (59)Lese majesty (1)Liberalism (14)Libya (2)Literature (3)Media (49)Memory laws (3)Middle East (8)Minorities (5)Money (10)Morality (9)Multiculturalism (9)National security (38)Net neutrality (14)Netherlands (2)Norway (1)Nudity (5)Occupy movement (1)Pakistan (4)Palestine (1)Philippines (1)Piracy (2)Poland (2)Politics (59)Pornography (7)Power (60)Privacy (23)Protest (25)Public Morality (26)Race (1)Radio (3)Regulation (10)Religion (28)Reputation (17)Right to information (57)Russia (2)Rwanda (1)Satire (13)Saudi Arabia (2)Science (9)Scientology (1)Secrecy (1)Singapore (2)Social media (14)South Africa (5)Southeast Asia (3)Surveillance (1)Syria (1)Technology (22)Terrorism (5)Thailand (1)Tunisia (1)Turkey (9)Twitter (9)Ukraine (1)United Kingdom (14)United States (20)Violence (30)Whistleblowing (3)Wikileaks (1)Wikipedia (2)YouTube (1) What is ‘dehumanising’ speech? Eric Heinze provocatively argues that no-platformers need to look into the mirror and examine their own blind spots. Are you sitting comfortably? How safe spaces became dangerous We must distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate safe spaces, argues Eric Heinze. Israel, no-platforming – and why there’s no such thing as ‘narrow exceptions’ to campus free speech Eric Heinze argues that it is contradictory to the principles of free speech to criticise the Israeli ambassador to Britain online and then no-platform him at a university talk. Should I go to that conference in Hungary? Boycotts betray free enquiry, but Viktor Orbán’s moves against the Central European University at least make them worth debating, says Eric Heinze Is there a universal right to free speech and what are its limits? Timothy Garton Ash in conversation with Nigel Warburton, as part of the Philosophy in the Bookshop series at Blackwell’s, Oxford. Free speech in Putin’s Russia: views from the inside Five Russian journalists and academics sit down with Free Speech Debate to discuss their experiences. The Jawaharlal Nehru University affair Udit Bhatia discusses the Indian government’s use of colonial-era laws against sedition and its failure to protect protestors taken into police custody.
What is ‘dehumanising’ speech? Eric Heinze provocatively argues that no-platformers need to look into the mirror and examine their own blind spots.
Are you sitting comfortably? How safe spaces became dangerous We must distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate safe spaces, argues Eric Heinze.
Israel, no-platforming – and why there’s no such thing as ‘narrow exceptions’ to campus free speech Eric Heinze argues that it is contradictory to the principles of free speech to criticise the Israeli ambassador to Britain online and then no-platform him at a university talk.
Should I go to that conference in Hungary? Boycotts betray free enquiry, but Viktor Orbán’s moves against the Central European University at least make them worth debating, says Eric Heinze
Is there a universal right to free speech and what are its limits? Timothy Garton Ash in conversation with Nigel Warburton, as part of the Philosophy in the Bookshop series at Blackwell’s, Oxford.
Free speech in Putin’s Russia: views from the inside Five Russian journalists and academics sit down with Free Speech Debate to discuss their experiences.
The Jawaharlal Nehru University affair Udit Bhatia discusses the Indian government’s use of colonial-era laws against sedition and its failure to protect protestors taken into police custody.