ABOUT CFAS
THE CENTER
CFAS provides programs designed to educate students about their First
Amendment heritage and to encourage faculty members to do original research
on freedom of expression.
Perhaps at no time in our history have First Amendment issues so dominated
national attention:
· Campuses struggle with rules to guide "politically
correct" speech
· The Supreme Court rules that certain religious practices are
not protected by the First Amendment
· In the name of national security, the Administration issues
regulations based on Congressional legislation that may infringe on First
Amendment freedoms.
· Protecting employees from harassment may violate the right
of free speech.
Unless the public clearly understands how the First Amendment has functioned
to protect us in the past, our liberties may be eroded in the future. The
Center's goal is to inform the public, the courts, administrative agencies
and Congress about the proper application of the First Amendment.
OUR MISSION
The Center stimulates interdisciplinary study of First Amendment issues.
Specifically, the Center seeks to promote research into and understanding
of the origins, evolution, and interpretation of the First Amendment. The
Center also produces research on such issues as freedom of information,
copyright law, academic freedom, and the application of the First Amendment
to such new technologies as cable, computer, telephone, television, and
satellite transmission.
The Center was established on October 24, 1988 and has initiated two
courses in the University's curriculum: Communication Studies 441, Freedom
of Expression and Conscience, and Communication Studies 442, Campaign Persuasion.
Both courses are interdisciplinary "capstone" classes on the campus.
THE DIRECTOR
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Dr. Craig Smith
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The Director of CFAS is Dr.
Craig Smith , Professor of Communication
Studies , who serves as the Director of the Center and as Chair of
the Department of Film and Electronic Arts. He has also served as Chair
of the Journalism Department, the Department of Comparative Literature
and Classics, and the Communication Studies Department. In 2000, he was
named the outstanding professor on the campus to go along with his Distinguished
Teaching (1997) and Distinguished Scholar (1994) Awards. In 1997
the National Speakers Association named him the Outstanding Professor in
the nation.
Dr. Smith is the author of more than a dozen books and over 50 scholarly
articles and book chapters. His most recent studies on the First Amendment
include Freedom of Expression and Partisan Politics (University of South
Carolina Press), Silencing the Opposition: Government Strategies of Suppression
(State University of New York Press), The Four Freedoms of the First Amendment
(Waveland, 2004), and Daniel Webster, An Oratorical Biography (University
of Missouri Press, 2005). His scholarly study of commercial speech was
selected as the lead article in the prestigious Free Speech Yearbook. He
regularly publishes editorials on the subject of freedom of expression
in such prestigious newspapers as the Miami Herald , the Los Angeles Times
, and the Washington Post.
Dr. Smith has served as a consultant to CBS News for convention, election
night, and inaugural coverage. He served as a full-time speechwriter for
President Gerald Ford and Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca. He has served
as a consultant to President George Bush and Governor Pete Wilson among
others. Dr. Smith served as Director of Senate Services for the Republican
Conference of the U.S. Senate in 1979-80, and as Deputy Director of the
National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee in 1981-82. In 1983 he
founded the Freedom of Expression Foundation and remains its president
to this time. Dr. Smith taught at San Diego State University, the University
of Virginia, and the University of Alabama at Birmingham before coming
to Long Beach State. From 1996 to 1998 Dr. Smith served on the California
Commission for Teacher Credentialing. He has served on the Statewide Academic
Senate and is now a member of the Board of Trustees of the California State
University system.
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