Playboy Foundation Announces Judges for 2008 Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Awards
2008年6月12日 - 4:31AM
PRニュース・ワイアー (英語)
Panel will choose first-ever winner of $25,000 Freedom of
Expression Award CHICAGO, June 11 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The
Playboy Foundation today announced the distinguished panel of civil
liberties advocates who will choose the winners of the 2008 Hugh M.
Hefner First Amendment Awards -- including the first-ever winner of
the Freedom of Expression Award, a $25,000 seed grant to fund the
work of a noteworthy advocate for the First Amendment. The 2008
selection committee members are David M. Rubin, Dean of the S.I.
Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University;
Geoffrey Stone, Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor at
University of Chicago Law School, and Nadine Strossen, President of
the American Civil Liberties Union and Professor of Law at New York
Law School. "This exceptional panel of judges will bring a wealth
of expertise and experience to the selection of the 2008 Hugh M.
Hefner First Amendment Award winners," said Christie Hefner,
Chairman and CEO of Playboy Enterprises, Inc. "I am certain their
own individual records of passionate commitment to civil liberties
will inspire our 2008 Award winners in their efforts to promote and
defend the fundamental rights protected by the First Amendment."
Mr. Rubin, who has served 18 years as Dean of the S.I. Newhouse
School of Public Communications, will step down from that position
effective June 30; after a sabbatical year, he will rejoin the
Newhouse School faculty as a professor. As dean, Mr. Rubin has had
an extraordinary impact on communications education nationwide
during a time of revolutionary change in journalism. His tenure was
crowned by the building of Newhouse III, a nationally acclaimed
state-of-the-art communications center completed in 2007. Mr. Rubin
sits on the advisory board of the Hearst Foundation's College
Journalism Competition and has twice served as a Pulitzer Prize
juror. Mr. Stone, a member of the University of Chicago law faculty
since 1973, is a noted scholar on constitutional law. His most
recent books are Top Secret: When Our Government Keeps Us in the
Dark (Rowman & Littlefield 2007) and War and Liberty: An
American Dilemma (W.W. Norton 2007). Mr. Stone's 2004 book,
Perilous Times: Free Speech in Wartime from the Sedition Act of
1798 to the War on Terrorism, received the Robert F. Kennedy Book
Award for 2005, the Los Angeles Times 2004 Book Prize for best book
in the field of history, the American Political Science
Association's Kammerer Award for 2005 for the best book in
Political Science, and Harvard University's 2005 Goldsmith Award
for the best book in the field of Public Affairs. Perilous Times
also won a Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award. Mr. Stone is
currently at work on a new book, Sexing the Constitution, which
will explore the historical evolution of the intersection of sex,
religion, and law. Ms. Strossen, the first woman ever to lead the
ACLU, has announced that she will step down as President later this
year after more than 17 years of distinguished service. During that
time, Ms. Strossen has earned a reputation as one of the nation's
best-known and most respected defenders of our civil liberties.
Under her leadership, the ACLU's membership has increased from
275,000 to more than 500,000. An early proponent of free speech and
privacy on the Internet, she also has led the fight against
government secrecy and human rights violations in the wake of 9/11.
In addition to her work on behalf of the ACLU, Ms. Strossen is a
full-time professor at New York Law School. Ms. Strossen, who has
served twice previously as a judge for the Hugh M. Hefner First
Amendment Awards, is the author of Defending Pornography: Free
Speech, Sex, and the Fight for Women's Rights (Scribner, 1995),
which The New York Times named a "Notable Book" of 1995. The judges
will choose the 2008 Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Award winners,
including the recipient of the first-ever $25,000 Freedom of
Expression Award. The new award was created to support the work of
an individual whose record of accomplishments indicates a promising
future as an effective advocate for the First Amendment. Preference
will be given to emerging leaders whose work to protect and promote
free speech in all its forms will be significantly supported by the
cash grant. In addition to creating the new Freedom of Expression
Award this year, the Playboy Foundation is doubling the value of
the cash award for the other Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Awards
to $10,000. Ms. Hefner created the Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment
Awards in 1979 to honor individuals who have made significant
contributions in the vital effort to protect and enhance First
Amendment rights for Americans. Over the last three decades, more
than 125 valiant advocates for First Amendment freedoms -- from
lawyers and journalists to librarians, filmmakers and high school
students -- have been recognized with the Hugh M. Hefner First
Amendment Award. Historically, award winners have worked in
journalism, education, book publishing, arts, entertainment,
government and law. The Playboy Foundation will accept nominations
for the 2008 Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Awards, including the
Freedom of Expression Award, through July 4. For more information,
or to submit a nomination, please contact the Playboy Foundation at
312-373-2435 or go to http://www.playboyenterprises.com/foundation.
The Playboy Foundation supports local and national nonprofit
organizations that protect the rights of the individual in a free
society. Since its inception in 1965, the Foundation has awarded
nearly $20 million in grants and in-kind contributions to
organizations concerned with First Amendment freedoms, civil
liberties and social justice. DATASOURCE: Playboy Enterprises, Inc.
CONTACT: Matthew Pakula, Director of Playboy Foundation,
+1-312-373-2435 Web site:
http://www.playboyenterprises.com/foundation
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