This page features news and research related to topics on freedom of speech at Columbia University.
Columbia University’s Knight Institute brought together experts to examine whether middleware can reshape control over online speech and the digital public sphere.
In his new book, “In Search of an Open Mind,” Columbia’s president emeritus offers a collection of his speeches, articles, and opinion columns.
Columbia Engineering and the Knight First Amendment Institute recently convened multidisciplinary experts to discuss the impact of artificial intelligence on public discourse, free speech, and democracy.
Lawsuit says ban compromises academic freedom, impedes vital research.
The Nobel laureate and Filipino-American journalist known for her pioneering efforts to protect media freedom will join the SIPA faculty in July 2024 as a professor of professional practice.
Columbia University today announced the 2023 Pulitzer Prizes, awarded on the recommendation of the Pulitzer Prize Board.
Over the past two decades at Columbia University, President Lee Bollinger has sought to preserve and strengthen freedom of expression.
Apple TV launched "The Matter of Black Lives," a three-part series featuring films and commentary by Columbia Journalism School's Jelani Cobb.
The best in television and audio reporting were celebrated in a ceremony hosted by CBS News's Norah O’Donnell and PBS NewsHour's Amna Nawaz.
A senior attorney at the Knight Institute explains why they filed the lawsuit and what's at stake for free speech.
The lawsuit says that the use of malicious software to surveil and intimidate journalists threatens press freedom around the world.
President Bollinger, Jelani Cobb, Natalia Herbst, and Zeynep Tufekci joined in the global event.