New Policy at Princeton Bans Reporters From Recording or Taking Photos at Faculty Meetings
“While we appreciate the University’s desire to make faculty meetings a space where faculty and administrators can speak candidly, those concerns need to be balanced against the need for transparency and reasonable media access.”
This is not how to create an atmosphere of transparency. What are they afraid of?
The College Fix reports:
Princeton bans reporters from recording, taking photos at faculty meetings
Reporters are now facing restrictions on recording and taking photos at Princeton University faculty meetings following a school policy that recently went into effect.
“The new rules also limit the number of reporters to two per campus publication and stipulate that reporters notify the Office of Communications of their attendance at least 24 hours in advance of meetings,” The Daily Princetonian reported.
In addition, campus reporters are required to “obtain media credentials prior to each faculty meeting,” the school newspaper reported.
The restrictions come after the Council of the Princeton University Community passed a broader ban in November 2025 on recordings “in an educational, residential, research or workplace setting, including off-campus University-sponsored activities.”
The school can also choose to ban recordings at public events if it explicitly states its intent to do so.
Dean of the Faculty Gene Jarrett told The Princetonian that the “recent guidance clarifying the protocol for observers is designed to ensure faculty can speak openly and candidly at their meetings, consistent with the Rules.”
She added that “non-faculty observers” will still be permitted to attend faculty meetings.
However, the new rules have sparked some criticism, including from Peter Barzilai, editor of Princeton Alumni Weekly.
“While we appreciate the University’s desire to make faculty meetings a space where faculty and administrators can speak candidly, those concerns need to be balanced against the need for transparency and reasonable media access,” he said.
Similarly, The Daily Princetonian’s Editor-in-Chief Jerry Zhu said, “The recent decision by the Office of the Dean of the Faculty to restrict press freedoms at Faculty meetings is highly regrettable and creates new obstacles to The Daily Princetonian’s mission of informing the campus community.”
Zhu added the publication is urging the office to “reconsider these restrictions and ensure that the campus press is not unnecessarily encumbered when engaged in legitimate newsgathering.”
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and the nazis win another one
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