All posts by Rahul

Upcoming Stanford Lecture: Balancing Liberty and Security in America

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On Monday, November 17, Stanford’s lecture series ‘The Security Conundrum’ continues with a conversation with Pulitzer prize winning journalist Barton Gellman.
When Edward Snowden decided in 2013 that the time had come to reveal the deepest secrets of the National Security Agency, one of the first journalists he approached was Barton Gellman of The Washington Post. Snowden gave Gellman a code name: BRASSBANNER. The name he chose for himself was VERAX, “truth teller” in Latin. So began one of the most dramatic chapters in the history of modern American journalism. In the ensuing months, Gellman received dozens of top-secret documents from Snowden, traveled to Moscow to meet him, and wrestled with tough questions about what, and what not, to publish. The Washington Post shared the 2014 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, the nation’s highest journalism honor, for Gellman’s reporting about the Snowden materials and the NSA. In a conversation with Philip Taubman, Gellman will recount his dealings with Snowden and describe how he and his editors weighed how to handle the Snowden materials. Few questions are more difficult for American journalists than determining how far a free press can venture in disclosing national security secrets without imperiling the nation’s security.
Hope many of you will be able to attend the discussion. More information here.

Upcoming Stanford Event: Saving Privacy

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On Tuesday, November 11, Stanford will host yet another exciting talk concerning the relationship between liberty, privacy and security. Reed Hundt — chair of the Federal Communications Commission under President Clinton — will discuss whether the NSA’s recent efforts to collect information in order to protect security might in fact end up undermining democracy.
More information here.

Upcoming Stanford Lecture Series: ‘The Security Conundrum: Balancing Security and Liberty in America’

Stanford Event

What should be the appropriate balance between liberty and security in a democratic society, especially in an age of terrorism and international conflict?  Stanford is hosting an exciting lecture series this quarter focused on this question, and we strongly encourage you to attend a lecture or two.  The first lecture in the series — a conversation with General Michael Hayden, former director of the NSA and CIA — will take place on Wednesday, October 8. More information here. The second lecture in the series — a conversation with Pulitzer Prize- winning journalist Barton Gellman — will take place on Monday, November 17. More information here.

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Do Students Have Rights to Free Speech?

It’s a standing feature of Justice and the Constitution that current events provide no shortage of relevant material that could easily be inserted into the syllabus.

Students Protest Outside School.
Students Protest Outside School.

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Today the New York Times had a lengthy article about high school student protests in Colorado where the school board has recently created curricular requirements about cultivating patriotism. What might this mean for students who wish to protest official state policy?

Under what circumstances can  public authorities like teachers and school principals limit student free speech?

Bonus question: what is the status of freedom of speech for undergraduate students at Stanford? It’s private university. Are you guaranteed first amendment rights to freedom of speech here?