Table of Contents
FIREMedia Kit
FIRE defends and promotes the value of free speech for all Americans in our courtrooms, on our campuses, and in our culture.
Founded in 1999 as the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, for over 20 years FIREhas worked to advance the cause of free speech and the values of the First Amendment on our nation’s college and university campuses. We have done so through our commitments to sincere nonpartisanship, courageous advocacy, and an enduring belief in free speech as a force for good. In 2022, FIREchanged its name to the FIREto reflect its broader effort to protect and promote these values off campus, as well.
We’re delighted to provide background on FIREbelow, but if you have any questions, please reach out. Reporters interested in receiving ֭'s press releases should .
Katie Kortepeter
Communications Campaign Manager
katie.kortepeter@thefire.org
Alex Griswold
Communications Campaign Manager
alex.griswold@thefire.org
- FIRE’s mission
- FIRE's logos
- FIRE's cases
- FIRE’s staff
- FIRE’s 25-year history
- Open positions
- FIRE’s 2023-2024 annual report
Remarks attributable to FIREPresident & CEO Greg Lukianoff
“We need to remind older Americans that freedom of speech is still a value worth fighting for, and we need to teach younger Americans that everything from scientific progress, to artistic expression, to social justice, peace, and living authentic lives requires the staunch protection of freedom of speech for all.” — Remarks on ֭'s expansion into national free speech advocacy on June 6, 2022.
"I’ve dedicated my life to defending freedom of speech because it is an essential human right. However, free speech is more than that; it’s nothing less than essential to our ability to understand the world. A giant step for human progress was the realization that, despite what our senses tell us, knowledge is hard to attain. It’s a never-ending, arduous, necessarily de-centralized process of testing and retesting, of chipping away at falsity to edge a bit closer to truth. It’s not just about the proverbial “marketplace of ideas”; it’s about allowing information — independent of idea or argument — to flow freely so that we can hope to know the world as it really is. This means seeing value in expression even when it appears to be wrongheaded or useless." — Testimony before the House Judiciary Committee on Feb. 6, 2024.