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Special Rapporteurship for Freedom of Expression
December 27, 2023
Washington D.C. - The Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR)
and its Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression (RELE)
held the event
"Freedom of Expression as a Way to End Structural Discrimination",
which addressed how censorship and restrictions on information and expression by
and about vulnerable groups impede the public debate on discrimination and
evidence-based dialogue on the subject of race, gender and sexual orientation.
The IACHR and its Special Rapporteur are monitoring reports and
complaints about a range of state-level initiatives including book bans and gag
orders that limit the exercise of the right to freedom of expression and
information of persons belonging to groups historically
discriminated against
in the United States. These initiatives affect libraries, schools and tertiary
academic spaces and could restrict conditions for a broad, plural, and robust
deliberation on issues of public interest in the country.
The opening of the event was attended by Suzanne Goldberg, from the
U.S. Department of State, who recognized the importance of the issue and the
need for school environments to be spaces that allow different points of view,
promote human rights, and make all students, across their diversities, to feel
included and welcome. Also participating in the panel were Kasey Meehan, from
PEN America, and Jamil Dawkwar, from the American Civil Liberties Union,
institutions that are dedicated to monitoring and defending freedom of
expression.
On behalf of the IACHR, the Commission’s Chair, Margarette May
Macaulay, welcomed the discussion and stated that "education is a tool of
transformation that enables cultural change within a society, which can then be
discrimination-free, anti-racist and decolonized. Education and culture are
essential to combat the prejudices that justify racial discrimination."
Commissioner Roberta Clarke, speaking to ban books in schools and
libraries, noted that according to analyses carried out by civil society
organizations, many of the books targeted for censorship addressed LGBTQI+
people and issues, the fight against racism, and sexual and reproductive rights.
"The denial of freedom of expression can also be a dark alley to
disregard for other human rights. Let's think about how education opens our
understanding of the realities and rights of others who have suffered historical
and structural discrimination in law and culture," said Commissioner Clarke.
Kasey Meehan of PEN America spoke to the censorial movement as
expressed in book bans and intimidatory legislation, which limit opportunities
to read, learn and teach. The consequences are immediate, especially for
children and students, encouraging an environment for bullying and silencing of
thought and expression. "My call to action to those in this room is use your
voice and our collective voice in defending the freedom to read, learn, and
teach by speaking to elected leaders and following and supporting organizations
defending free expression in education", said Meehan.
Jamil Dakwar stressed that this censorship and these restrictions on
free speech are a backlash against activism to end structural discrimination.
"Under the First Amendment, universities have to protect free speech and at the
same time remove all barriers that impede access to education and make sure that
the students themselves are not being discriminated against and do not feel a
direct intimidating threat directed against them, so violence cannot be
tolerated, and that is something that is clear," Dakwar said.
Commissioner Julissa Mantilla indicated that education and freedom of
expression must go hand in hand. "Education is not only having access to all the
information, but also thinking about other rights: economic, social and
cultural, access to education includes going to school, but also having food,
housing, having water, having all these things that sometimes we think is
obvious, but it really isn't."
In this regard, the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression, Pedro
Vaca Villarreal, cautioned against restricts on freedom of expression.
"The lack of freedom of expression is a cause that contributes to the
disregard of other human rights and, therefore, the preservation of freedom of
expression is a necessary condition for the peaceful and free functioning of
democratic societies in the Americas," the Rapporteur said.
The IACHR will continue to monitor the enjoyment of the right to
non-discrimination, equality, and the status of freedom of expression of
vulnerable and historically discriminated populations and promote open and
constructive dialogue in the US and in other contexts in the Americas and the
Caribbean.
The Office of the Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression is an office created by the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) to stimulate the hemispheric defense of the right to freedom of thought and expression, considering its fundamental role in the consolidation and development of the democratic system. The IACHR is a principal and autonomous organ of the Organization of American States (OAS), whose mandate arises from the OAS Charter and the American Convention on Human Rights.
No. R319/23
2:22 PM