This page features news and research related to topics on freedom of speech at Columbia University.
CNN's Anderson Cooper and NPR's Michele Norris hosted this year's virtual Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards.
Free speech has been under attack during the Trump administration. The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University suggests five ways the Biden administration can protect these constitutional rights.
Katy Glenn Bass discusses the Facebook antitrust case, its impact on freedom of speech, and what questions are still unanswered.
Donald Trump’s attacks on the United States postal service are not only unusual, they appear to be undemocratic.
Columbia Journalism School announced the latest winners of the Maria Moors Cabot Prize for journalists over their careers for outstanding reporting on the Americas.
The news of the last several months has prompted the duPont-Columbia University Awards to extend its deadline for submissions.
Public protests are a form of free speech, and that is being challenged during our nation's current demonstrations against police violence.
Columbia University announced the 2020 Pulitzer Prizes, awarded on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board.
The Knight First Amendment Institute is publishing a collection of essays from leading experts and scholars looking into big tech's relationship with free speech.
An annual event at the Italian Academy marking Holocaust Remembrance Day looks at online extremism.
Hosts Christiane Amanpour, of CNN, and Michael Barbaro, of The New York Times, handed out 16 journalists a 2020 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton.
Past winners discuss the importance of the media, the stories behind their most powerful pieces and how journalists need to reach those who doubt the facts.