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Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS Hosts First Amendment Library Launch Event at Jones Day
On Monday, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS and nearly 90 supporters and friends gathered at the Jones Day law firmās rooftop to celebrate the launch of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās First Amendment Library. Originally the small passion project of First Amendment law scholar , the library is now designed to be a premier resource for information about the First Amendmentās five freedoms. The library contains a growing database of more than 900 First Amendment-related Supreme Court opinions, historical material, and special document collections you wonāt find anywhere else.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS President and CEO Greg Lukianoff welcomed attendees and acknowledged those whose efforts and support made the First Amendment Library possible. This included the libraryās 15-member board of advisors, the , and Collins, among others, with a special thanks to Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās Executive Director Robert Shibley and his assistant, Jackie Farmer.
, a partner at the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine and a leading expert on First Amendment law who has worked extensively with Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās , took to the podium to offer his remarks on the library as a valuable resource not only for students and the general public, but also for practicing attorneys. The First Amendment Library, he said, is not a typical database but a ācomprehensive body of knowledgeā bringing together news stories about the First Amendment, information on the advocates involved in First Amendment cases, case law, briefs, scholarly articles, popular articles, and more.
The libraryās expansive contents, Corn-Revere said, are what set it apart from any other existing resource by offering the ābroader storiesā that make up the richness of First Amendment law:
First Amendment law isnāt just the cases. It isnāt just the math, where you look at cases that have a certain ātest,ā and you say, āokay, letās plug in the facts of this caseā and see what you get at the end of the equation. First Amendment law is about the stories that we live. These cases are about flesh and blood individuals, and you have to look at a comprehensive databaseālike the one the First Amendment Library has brought to lifeāto understand what those stories are.
Robert Shibley followed Corn-Revereās reflections with an introductory video clip:
He also gave a brief demonstration of how visitors can make use of all the features the First Amendment Library has to offer, highlighting search functions that allow users to browse the collection by topic (Freedom of Speech & Expression, Religion, the Press, Assembly & Petition, Association, and a special section devoted to āCases on Campusā), hone in on specific subtopics (such as āPicketing,ā āElectronic Media,ā and āGag Ordersā), or locate cases from a specific year. Additional features of interest include an interactive timeline of the history of free speech, transcripts from the obscenity trials of comedian Lenny Bruce, and a collection of papers from Eugene Volokh, a member of the First Amendment Libraryās Board of Advisors and an accomplished law professor and scholar.
āWe want this to be the best source there is, and a free source,ā Shibley said. āAwareness of what is going on when it comes to First Amendment law is really critical to continue to preserve those liberties. So many peopleāstudents and facultyādonāt seem to understand the importance of free speech and free expression for everyone, and we want to do everything we can to change that.ā
Closing remarks by , editor of the First Amendment Library, emphasized the importance of turning an idea into a reality and how, with the help of dedicated individuals, his small collection of organized cases has become a living, growing tool for defending the First Amendment and educating Americans about their right to free expression:
If you believe in the First Amendment, if you believe thereās a place in your world to defend ideas with which you disagreeāand to defend ones with which you agreeāthen the First Amendment is a vital part of your life, be it freedom of speech, press, petition, assembly, or religion...We can never have enough folks defending our five freedoms.
It is Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās hope that the First Amendment Library generates both interest in and knowledge of First Amendment rights now and in years to come, as the library continues to grow. Understanding our rights is essential to their protection, so visit the First Amendment Library today and, in the words of Ron Collins: āTake heed. Read. Learn. Think. Judge. And then share it all with your fellow citizens, both in conversation and practice. Freedom, after all, is what we make it.ā
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