Freedom of Speech and Privacy
Selected Subject Headings for Searching Orbis
- Freedom of speech
- Freedom of the press
- Freedom of information
- Censorship [NOTE: May also be used as a subheading, e.g.
English literature--censorship]
- Privacy
- Academic freedom
- Government and the press
Adler, Allan, and Ann Profozich. Using the Freedom of Information
Act: a step by step guide. Washington, D.C.: The Center, 1983.
SML, Reference KF5753 Z9 +A344
Bennett, James R. Control of information in the United States: an
annotated bibliography. Westport, CT: Meckler, 1987.
SML, Reference Z658 U5 B46 1987
Blue, Martha. By the book: legal ABCs for the printed word.
Flagstaff, Ariz.: Northland Pub., 1990.
SML, Reference KF2750 Z9 B55 1990
An interactive exhibition presented by the Texas
Humanities Resource Center. There is information about forms of censorship,
censoring bodies, readers' rights, censored art and literature, censored
history, and more.
An online exhibit at the University of Kansas,
presenting KU librarian Robert Vosper's exhibit and catalog on censorship,
created in the face of McCarthy-era attacks on free speech.
The CDD is a nonprofit organization working to
ensure that the digital media systems serve the public interest.
CRIS is a campaign to ensure that communication
rights are central to the information society. It is sponsored and supported
by the Platform for Communication Rights, a group of NGOs involved in
media and communication projects around the world.
Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA)
The Electronic Frontier Foundation was created
to defend our rights to think, speak, and share our ideas, thoughts, and
needs using new technologies, such as the Internet and the World Wide
Web.
EPIC is a public interest research center in Washington,
D.C. It was established in 1994 to focus public attention on emerging
civil liberties issues and to protect privacy, the First Amendment, and
constitutional values.
Foerstel, Herbert N. Free expression and censorship in America:
an encyclopedia. Westport, Conn.; London: Greenwood Press, 1997.
SML, Reference Z658 U5 F644X 1997
Free expression resource directory. [Washington, D.C.?]: Free
Expression Network [1997/1998]
SML, Reference Z658 U5 +F74
The U.S. Department of Justice is required under
the Freedom of Information Act to disclose federal records (with certain
exceptions and exclusions) requested in writing by any person. See also
the ACLU's FOIA Step-by-Step
Guide
Freedom of information guide. Washington, D.C.: WANT Pub. Co.,
1982.
SML, Reference KF5753 Z9 F73 1982
Green, Jonathon. The encyclopedia of censorship. New York, N.Y.:
Facts on File, 1990.
SML, Reference Z657 +G73 1989
Hoffmann, Frank W. Intellectual freedom and censorship: an annotated
bibliography. Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1989.
SML, Reference Z658 U5 H64 1989
Intellectual freedom manual. Compiled by the Office for Intellectual
Freedom of the American Library Association. 6th ed. Chicago: American
Library Association, 2002.
SML, Stacks Z711.4 I57X 2002 (LC)
From Golden Gate University. The top page is sparse
but links to valuable Web directories on alternative publications, privacy
issues, and recent issues.
The IFEA strives to ensure the continuation of
the Internet as a forum for open, diverse and unimpeded expression and
to maintain the vital role the Internet plays in providing an efficient
and democratic means of distributing information around the world
McCoy, Ralph E. Freedom of the press: an annotated bibliography.
Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1968.
SML, Reference Z657 +M33
SML, Reference Z657 +M33 Suppl [ten-year supplement,
1967-1977]
SML, Reference Z657 +M33 1978-1992 Suppl. 2 [second
supplement]
NCAC is an alliance of 50 national non-profit organizations
that promotes and defends First Amendment values of freedom of thought,
inquiry and expression, opposes restraints on open communication, and
supports access to information .
Nordquist, Joan. Pornography and censorship. Santa Cruz, CA,
USA: Reference and Research Services, 1987.
SML, Reference Z7164 S66 C65 7
The Office for Intellectual Freedom is charged
with implementing ALA policies concerning the concept of intellectual
freedom as embodied in the Library Bill of Rights. The
site includes information on banned and burned books, and various advocacy
committees of the ALA.
Press and speech freedoms in the world, from antiquity until 1998:
a chronology. Compiled by Louis Edward Ingelhart. Westport, Conn.;
London: Greenwood Press, 1998.
SML, Reference Z657 I525X 1998
Through research, advocacy, and public education,
the FAS Project on Government Secrecy works to challenge excessive government
secrecy and to promote public oversight.
Sellen, Betty-Carol, and Patricia A.Young. Feminists, pornography,
and the law: an annotated bibliography of conflict, 1970-1986. Hamden,
Conn.: Library Professional Publications, 1987.
SML, Reference Z7164 P84 S45 1987
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