
National Security and Press Freedom
About the Event:
A central question of democracy is how to balance a government’s need to conduct national security operations in secret with the public’s right to know what their government is doing. The answer—debated to this day—is both a complex policy judgment and an equally complex judgment about the meaning of the First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and the press. Legal scholar Geoffrey Stone (coauthor of National Security, Leaks, and Freedom of the Press) convenes a panel with former director of the CIA John Brennan and Washington Post national security reporter Ellen Nakashima (two of the book’s contributors) to discuss secrecy, disclosure, security, and the First Amendment.
This program is the first panel in our new series Deep Dive: Speech, curated by Geoffrey Stone
This 3-part series curated and hosted by legal scholar Geoffrey Stone (Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago) will consider a variety of perspectives on free speech in the 21st century. We'll explore some of the forces driving wide-ranging debates around First Amendment rights in our moment, including freedom of the press and national security, the role of social media platforms and internet companies, and hate speech.
- All CHF's virtual events have closed captions.
This program is presented as part of the annual Karla Scherer Endowed Lecture Series for the University of Chicago

Geoffrey Stone
Geoffrey R. Stone is the Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago where he has served as Dean o...

John O. Brennan
John Brennan
John O. Brennan was director of the Central Intelligence Agency from March 2013 until January 2017 and Deputy National Security Ad...

Ellen Nakashima
Ellen Nakashima reports on national security for The Washington Post. She covers issues related to intelligence, foreign malign in...
[Event tile image description: The event image at the top left of the event page is an aerial photograph of a person in a suit being interviewed by a circle of journalists, all holding out their microphones and recorders to the speaker. Neither the faces of the journalists nor the speaker are pictured.]



