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Foundation for Individual Rights in Expression

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Foundation for Individual Rights in Expression
FIRE logo.png
Basic facts
Location:Philadelphia. and Washington, D.C.
Type:501(c)(3)
Affiliation:Nonpartisan
Top official:Greg Lukianoff, President and CEO
Founder(s):Alan Charles Kors and Harvey Silverglate
Year founded:1999
Website:Official website
Promoted policies
Civil Liberties Policy
Budget
2014:$7,401,750

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Expression (FIRE) is an organization whose work concerns university students and faculty members the organization considers to have been discriminated against by administrators and the government while promoting values such as free speech, academic freedom, and due process.[1] Their website says they "worked to advance the cause of free speech and the values of the First Amendment on our nation’s college and university campuses."[2]

Background

FIRE was founded in 1999 by Alan Charles Kors, a professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, and Harvey Silverglate, a Boston-based civil liberties attorney who still serves on the organization's board of directors. The organization was formed following the publication in 1998 of Kors and Silverglate's book The Shadow University: The Betrayal Of Liberty On America's Campuses. FIRE's website says its mission is "to defend and sustain the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought—the most essential qualities of liberty."[1][2]

Leadership

As of December 2025, the following were listed as members of FIRE's board of directors:[3]

  • Kurt Jaggers, Chairman, Board of Directors
  • Samuel J. Abrams
  • John Ellis
  • Kmele Foster
  • Allison Hayward
  • John B. Henneman III
  • Sandy Leong
  • Joseph Maline
  • Virginia Postrel
  • Keith Whittington

Work and activities

Lawsuits

FIRE has filed lawsuits over violations of freedom of speech, and as of December 2025, its website lists cases it has been involved in going back to 2021.[4]

College policies reforms

FIRE has a team focused on addressing policies that they say violate freedom of speech. The team works with the administrator and offers policy solutions. According to their website, FIRE "maintains a database that catalogs the speech codes of around 500 colleges and universities nationwide. That data fuels FIRE’s policy awareness and college reform advocacy efforts, giving us the ability to directly work with administrators to offer analysis and advice, coordinate targeted publicity efforts, and publish our annual Spotlight on Speech Codes report reviewing the state of free speech at America’s colleges and universities."[5]

Legislative policy

FIRE has a team that works with lawmakers to advocate for policies that they say would promote freedom of speech. Their website says they support "improving Title IX regulations governing procedures for campus sexual misconduct and passing legislation that defines a national standard for student-on-student harassment, bans “free speech zones” from public college campuses, protects academic freedom, and more."[6]

Notable endorsements

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Finances

The following is a breakdown of FIRE's revenues and expenses from 2014 to 2025. The information comes from ProPublica.

FIRE financial data 2014-2025
Year Revenue Expenses
2014 $3.1 million $3.3 million
2015 $7.4 million $4.2 million
2016 $6.4 million $5.7 million
2017 $10.9 million $6.8 million
2018 $12.6 million $8.1 million
2019 $10.9 million $8.7 million
2020 $13.7 million $9.5 million
2021 $16 million $10.5 million
2022 $37.1 million $22.3 million
2023 $35.9 million $34.2 million
2024 $33.4 million $28 million
2025 $40 million $29.7 million

Media

Spotlight on Campus Speech Codes 2016
FIRE Celebrated Its 15th Anniversary in 2014
CEO Greg Lukianoff: Does Free Speech Offend You?

Recent news

The link below is to the most recent stories in a Google news search for the terms “Foundation for Individual Rights in Expression” FIRE. These results are automatically generated from Google. Ballotpedia does not curate or endorse these articles.

See also

External links

Footnotes