Liberty, Security, and Indiana Libraries

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Date
2006
Language
American English
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H.W. Wilson Company
Abstract

Until recently, most library literature on intellectual freedom and censorship focused on external efforts to restrict access to materials already owned or made accessible by libraries. With 9/11 and the passage of the USA PATRIOT Act, the defense of patron privacy and the confidentiality of patron records, long a growing concern, has jumped to the fore. Self-censorship by citizens afraid to exercise their freedom to read out of fear that someone may uncover their reading habits and subject them to social or state sanctions has become a major issue. ("Read" is used throughout this essay for "read, view, listen to, or access.") In legal terms such fears exert a "chilling effect" on the exercise of First Amendment liberties.

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Archer, J. Douglas. (2006). Liberty, Security, and Indiana Libraries. Indiana libraries, 25(3), 18-21.
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0275777X
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