Author picture

Tamara L. Roleff

Author of Gun Control: Opposing Viewpoints

71 Works 660 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Tamara L. Roleff is a published author and an editor of young adult books. Some of the published credits of Tamara L. Roleff include The Olympics (At Issue Series), Genetic Engineering (Compact Research Series), Body Piercing and Tattoos (At Issue Series). (Bowker Author Biography)

Works by Tamara L. Roleff

Censorship: Opposing Viewpoints (2002) (2001) 25 copies, 2 reviews
Gay Rights (1997) 21 copies
Black magic and witches (2003) 17 copies
War: Opposing Viewpoints (1999) 11 copies
Alien abductions (2003) 7 copies
Sex Education (1998) 5 copies
Steroid Abuse (2010) 3 copies
Police corruption (2002) 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
I read the essays in Chapter 3, "Should Schools and Libraries Practice Censorship?" Viewpoint #1 was an excerpt (2000) from the Family Friendly Libraries website. The author, Helen Chaffee Biehle, believes that libraries should restrict children's access to "obscene" or objectionable materials. However, the fifth article of ALA's Library Bill of Rights says, "A person’s right to use a library should not be denied or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views" (emphasis added). show more (Article III begins, "Libraries should challenge censorship...")

The strongest point against Biehle's argument, however, is that libraries and librarians cannot act in loco parentis; it is the parent or guardian's responsibility to be aware of what his or her child is doing at the library and what materials he or she is checking out. Parents have the right to make rules about what their children - and only their children - can access; they cannot expect librarians to act as censors.

Viewpoint #2, authored by Bruce J. Ennis - general counsel to the Freedom to Read Foundation - presented the argument that restricting a minor's access to books or other materials constitutes censorship, and therefore violates the First Amendment. ALA policies, Ennis writes, are based on and consistent with federal and state constitutional protections.
show less
This book tackled difficult subjects in referenced to censorship, but gave the viewpoint of both sides in order to stimulate knowledgeable debate. I enjoyed the quotes that started out each chapter and the cartoons dispersed throughout the text which helped to get the point across to the reader.

Lists

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
71
Members
660
Popularity
#38,227
Rating
3.8
Reviews
2
ISBNs
161

Charts & Graphs