• 2023.08.16 PAJ free speech Forbes

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    A group of 13 college presidents has begun a campaign to bring attention to the importance of free expression, critical inquiry and civil discourse on college campuses. Wellesley College is a member of this group.

  • 2023.08.15 Volić ranked choice voting CommonWealth Magazine

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    "The 2021 Boston mayoral election was historic, with 95 percent of voters casting their ballots for a woman of color in the preliminary for the city’s highest office. But even this contest could not escape plurality’s systemic flaws," writes mathetmatics professor Ismar Volić for CommonWealth magazine on why Boston needs ranked choice voting.

  • 2023.08.15 PAJ free speech AP News

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    A group of 13 college presidents announced the formation of a group to “champion free expression” at their institutions as higher education grapples with free speech issues nationwide, from speakers being shouted down to professors losing jobs over their perceived politics... The 13 participating institutions are: Benedict College; Claremont McKenna College; Cornell University; DePauw University; Duke University; James Madison University; Rollins College; Rutgers University; University of Notre Dame; University of Pittsburgh; University of Richmond; Wellesley College; and Wesleyan University.

  • 2023.08.15 PAJ free speech The Chronicle of Higher Education

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    More than a dozen college presidents have signed on to a new campaign to bolster free speech on their campuses. The 13 leaders — hailing from Cornell, Duke, Rutgers Universities, and Wellesley College, to name a few — are pledging to “urgently spotlight, uplift, and re-emphasize” free speech and academic freedom over the next academic year, they announced Tuesday. The presidents, who are planning what they call “urgent action,” are mostly from private colleges.

  • 2023.08.15 PAJ free speech The Boston Globe

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    The presidents of a wide-ranging group of 13 universities are promoting free speech on their campuses this academic year, as part of a nonprofit initiative announced Tuesday to combat what organizers call dire threats to US democracy. The participating schools include the University of Notre Dame, a private Catholic research school, Benedict College, a historically Black school in South Carolina, Rollins College, a small liberal arts school in Florida, and Ivy League member Cornell University, which in April announced that freedom of expression would be the theme for its 2023 school year. The other schools are Claremont McKenna College, DePauw University, Duke University, James Madison University, the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Richmond, Rutgers University, Wellesley College, and Wesleyan University.