Lorraine Kenny
Communications Director
Lorraine Kenny is the Knight First Amendment Institute’s communications director. She previously served for many years as a communications and program strategist at the ACLU, where she worked on a range of issues, including reproductive freedom, religious freedom, LGBT rights, and women’s rights. In this capacity, Kenny led several messaging research projects and communications campaigns in support of abortion rights, comprehensive sexuality education, and marriage equality. In 2013, she became the ACLU’s first associate director for communications and marketing, leading a multi-year rebranding project that focused on engaging members and activists as the key to the future of the organization and the fight for civil liberties more broadly.
Prior to working at the ACLU, Kenny was a visiting professor in the Anthropology Department at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, NY, where she taught seminars in the anthropology of race, visual anthropology, and feminist cultural theory.
Kenny has a Ph.D. in the history of consciousness from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and a B.A. in art history from the University of Chicago. She has published numerous articles and is the author of Daughters of Suburbia: Growing Up White, Middle-Class, and Female, an “autoethnography” focused on the lives of teenage girls at a Long Island, NY, middle school. The book examines how standards of normalcy define gender, exercise power, and reinforce the cultural practices of whiteness.
Contact
Selected Projects
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An Illustrated Field Guide to Social Media
A look at alternative logics for social media published in connection with “Reimagine the Internet”
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Lies and the Law
A series of public conversations and publications exploring what the law can and should do about the problem of lies and deception in the contemporary mass public sphere
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Views on First
What happens when social media collides with the First Amendment?
Selected Work
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Institute Update
The Tech Giants, Monopoly Power, and Public Discourse: Visualizing the Conversation
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Video
Prepublication Review: A Far-Reaching System of Government Censorship
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Tale of Two Marriages
HuffPost
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Women Don't Check Their Reproductive Rights at the Jailhouse Door
Women, Girls, & Criminal Justice
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Daughters of Suburbia
Rutgers University Press
Contact
Selected Projects
-
An Illustrated Field Guide to Social Media
A look at alternative logics for social media published in connection with “Reimagine the Internet”
-
Lies and the Law
A series of public conversations and publications exploring what the law can and should do about the problem of lies and deception in the contemporary mass public sphere
-
Views on First
What happens when social media collides with the First Amendment?
Writings & Appearances
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Institute Update
New Podcast on Speech & the Border
Season three of “Views on First” looks at the frontiers of censorship and surveillance
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Quick Take
Groups Press Attorney General to Drop Espionage Act Charges against Julian Assange
Warn that criminal case poses grave threat to press freedom
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Quick Take
The Pentagon Papers 50 Years Later
Safeguarding press freedom today requires extending protections to whistleblowers and limiting the use of the Espionage Act