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PEN America
PEN America
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PEN America (formerly PEN American Center), founded in 1922,[3] and headquartered in New York City, is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization[4] whose goal is to raise awareness for the protection of free expression in the United States and worldwide through the advancement of literature and human rights. PEN America is the largest of the more than 100 PEN centers worldwide that together compose PEN International.[1] PEN America has offices in New York City, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and since late 2023 also in Florida.[5]

Key Information

PEN America's advocacy includes work on educational censorship,[6] press freedom and the safety of writers, campus free speech, online harassment, artistic freedom, and support to regions of the world with challenges to freedom of expression.[7] PEN America also campaigns for individual writers and journalists who have been imprisoned or come under threat for their work and annually presents the PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Award.[8]

PEN America hosts public programming and events on literature and human rights, including the PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature and the annual PEN America Literary Awards, sometimes referred to as the "Oscars of Books."[9][10] PEN America also works to amplify underrepresented voices, including emerging authors and writers who are undocumented, incarcerated,[11] or face obstacles in reaching audiences.[12]

The organization's name was conceived as an acronym for "Poets, Essayists, Novelists" (later broadened to "Poets, Playwrights, Editors, Essayists, Novelists"). As its membership expanded to include a more diverse range of people involved in literature and freedom of expression, the United States branch of the organization decided it would no longer treat PEN as an acronym.[1]

History

[edit]
The 1986 PEN congress: (left to right) John Updike, Norman Mailer, E. L. Doctorow

PEN America was formed on April 19, 1922, in New York City, and included among its initial members writers such as Willa Cather, Eugene O'Neill, Robert Frost, Ellen Glasgow, Edwin Arlington Robinson, and Robert Benchley. Booth Tarkington served as the organization's first president.[1]

PEN America's founding came after the launch of PEN International in 1921 in London[3] by Catherine Amy Dawson-Scott, a British poet, playwright, and peace activist, who enlisted John Galsworthy as PEN International's first president. The intent of PEN International was to foster international literary fellowship among writers that would transcend national and ethnic divides in the wake of World War I.[1] PEN America subscribes to the principles outlined in the PEN International Charter.[13]

PEN America presidents have included current president Jennifer Finney Boylan, Ayad Akhtar, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Louis Begley, Ron Chernow, Joel Conarroe, Jennifer Egan, Frances FitzGerald, Peter Godwin, Francine Prose, Salman Rushdie, Michael Scammell, and Andrew Solomon.[14]

In 2018, the organization filed suit against President Trump for allegedly using the powers of his office to retaliate against unfavorable reporting.[15] In 2023, it filed suit against the school district in Escambia County, Florida, over book bans, joined by publisher Penguin Random House, several banned authors, and parents in the district.[16]

As of June 2022, PEN America staff announced their intention to unionize. The Los Angeles Times reported that workers unionized with Unit of Work, a venture capitalist startup to help workers unionize, and that PEN America recognized the union the day after it was announced.[17]

PEN America celebrated its centenary in 2022 with an event featuring authors Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Margaret Atwood, Jennifer Finney Boylan, and Dave Eggers; an exhibition at the New York Historical Society;[18] and a large light-projection by the artist Jenny Holzer at the Rockefeller Center.[19][20]

In October 2024, longtime CEO Suzanne Nossel announced that she would take a new position, and the organization appointed Summer Lopez and Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf as interim co-CEOs.[21]

PEN Board of Trustees

[edit]

The PEN America Board of Trustees is composed of writers, artists, and leaders in the fields of publishing, media, technology, law, finance, human rights, and philanthropy.

Jennifer Finney Boylan, author and LGBTQ rights advocate, became president of PEN America on December 11, 2023,[22] succeeding Ayad Akhtar, a recipient of the Pulitzer Prize who was named president December 2, 2020, and Jennifer Egan, a recipient of the Pulitzer Prize and the 2018 Carnegie Medal for literary excellence, who became president in 2018.[23] Other members of the Board of Trustees Executive Committee are: Executive Vice President Tracy Higgins, Treasurer Markus Dohle, Vice Presidents Marie Arana, Dinaw Mengestu, and Marvin S. Putnam, and Executive Committee Members Peter Barbey, Patricia Fili-Krushel, and Michael Pietsch.[24]

Additional trustees are: Ayad Akhtar, Luis Alberto Urrea, John Chao, Susan Choi, Roxanne Donovan, Patricia Duff,Tom Healy, Elizabeth Hemmerdinger, Linda E. Johnson, Zachary Karabell, Franklin Leonard, Margo Lowy, Ken Miller,Paul Muldoon, Lynn Nottage, George Packer, Jodi Picoult, Alix Ritchie, Anya Salama, Richard Sarnoff, Andrew Solomon, Suzy Wahba, Tara Westover, and Jamie Wolf. Ex-Officio Trustees are Krystyna Poray Goddu and Allison Markin Powell.[24]

The Interim Co-Chief Executive Officers of PEN America are Summer Lopez and Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf.[24]

Literature

[edit]

PEN America holds multiple events in the United States throughout the year with the goal of celebrating literature in multiple forms. Many feature prominent authors who appear at festivals and on panel discussions, give lectures, and are featured at PEN America's Authors' Evenings. As a part of its work, PEN America also gives recognition to emerging writers, recognizing them through PEN America's Literary Awards or bringing them to new audiences at public events. Among them are: Hermione Hoby, Morgan Jerkins, Crystal Hana Kim, Alice Sola Kim, Lisa Ko, Layli Long Soldier, Carmen Maria Machado, Darnell L. Moore, Alexis Okeowo, Helen Oyeyemi, Tommy Pico, Jenny Zhang, and Ibi Zoboi.[1]

PEN World Voices Festival

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The PEN World Voices Festival is a week-long series of events in New York City hosted by PEN America each spring. It is the largest international literary festival in the United States, and the only one with a human rights focus. The festival was founded by Salman Rushdie in the aftermath of September 11 Attacks, with the aim of broadening channels of dialogue between the United States and the world.[25]

Notable guests have included: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Margaret Atwood, Paul Auster, Samantha Bee, Giannina Braschi, Carrie Brownstein, Ron Chernow, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Teju Cole, E. L. Doctorow, Dave Eggers, Roxane Gay, Masha Gessen, John Irving, Marlon James, Saeed Jones, Jhumpa Lahiri, Ottessa Moshfegh, Hasan Minaj, Sean Penn, Cecile Richards, Salman Rushdie, Gabourey Sidibe, Patti Smith, Zadie Smith, Andrew Solomon, Pia Tafdrup, Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Colm Toibin, Amor Towles, and Colson Whitehead.[25][26]

PEN America Literary Awards

[edit]

The PEN America Literary Awards annually honor outstanding voices in literature across genres, including fiction, poetry, drama, science and writing, essays, biography, and children's literature. PEN America confers 11 awards, fellowships, grants, and prizes each year, presenting nearly US$350,000 to writers and translators.[10]

As of 2018, the US$75,000 PEN/Jean Stein Book Award is the top award given by PEN America,[27] and among the largest literary prizes in the United States.[28] Among other awards conferred are the $25,000 PEN/Hemingway Award for a Debut Novel, the $25,000 PEN/Bingham Award for a Debut Short Story Collection, and the $10,000 PEN Open Book Award for new books by writers of color.[27]

PEN America Literary Gala and PEN America Los Angeles Gala

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The PEN America Literary Gala in New York and PEN America Los Angeles Gala are annual events celebrating free expression and the literary arts. These events include tributes and calls to action to audiences of authors, screenwriters, producers, executives, philanthropists, actors, and other devotees of the written word. Honorees have included Salman Rushdie, Stephen King, J. K. Rowling, Toni Morrison, and Margaret Atwood. Celebrated writers serve as Literary Hosts for the events.[29][30]

PEN America Prison and Justice Writing Program

[edit]

Founded in 1971, the PEN Prison Writing Program provides hundreds of inmates across the country with writing resources and audiences for their work. The program sponsors an annual writing contest, publishes a free writing handbook for prisoners, provides one-on-one mentoring to inmates whose writing shows promise, and seeks to bring inmates' work to the public through literary events, readings and publications. PEN America also provides assistance to other prison writing initiatives around the country and offers a Writing for Justice Fellowship for writers inside and outside of prison seeking to advance the conversation around the challenges of mass incarceration through creative expression.[31]

Support to writers

[edit]

The PEN Writers' Emergency Fund assists professional writers in acute, emergency financial crisis.[32] PEN America Membership committees focus on the interests of literary professionals in different fields and include the Translation Committee and the Children and Young Adult Book Authors Committee.[33][34] The Emerging Voices Fellowship is a literary mentorship that aims to provide new writers who are isolated from the literary establishment with the tools, skills, and knowledge they need to launch a professional writing career.[35] The DREAMing Out Loud program helps aspiring migrant writers.[36] PEN America also has offered workshops that nurture the writing skills of domestic workers, taxi drivers, street vendors, and others wage earners.[1]

Publications

[edit]

PEN America has several periodic publications. They include the Prison Writing Awards Anthology featuring winning entries from the annual contest for incarcerated authors, and PEN America Best Debut Short Stories, a yearly anthology of fiction by the recipients of the PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers.[37]

Free expression

[edit]

PEN America's free expression programs defend writers and journalists and protect free expression rights in the United States and around the world. This work includes research and reports on topical issues, advocacy internationally and in the United States, and campaigns on policy issues and on behalf of individual writers and journalists under threat.[1]

Free expression and education

[edit]

After 2020, PEN America increasingly focused on tracking book bans,[38] including with its annual Banned in the USA report[39] and educational censorship in public schools and higher education, including "educational gag order" bills.[40] In 2023, PEN America, along with publisher Penguin Random House and several banned authors, and parents, filed suit against the Escambia County School District, claiming that book bans violate Constitutional rights to free speech and equal protection under the law.[41] The organization also hosts regular Free Speech Advocacy Institutes to train young people to advocate for free speech.[42]

Writers at risk

[edit]

PEN America's work is sustained advocacy on behalf of individual writers and journalists who are being persecuted because of their work. With help from its members and supporters, PEN America carries out campaigns to ensure the freedom, safety, and ability to write and publish without constraint. Advocacy is conducted from PEN America's Washington, D.C., office, as well as through national and international campaigns, events, reports, and delegations. The organization publishes an index of threats to writers[43] and gives out an annual Freedom to Write award.[44] PEN America also focuses on countries and regions where free expression is under particular challenge, including China, Myanmar, Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, and Central Asia.[45]

Press freedom and disinformation

[edit]

PEN America monitors the freedom of the press and safety of journalists in the United States and internationally. PEN America also focuses on issues of fraudulent news and media literacy, and has produced an in-depth report, "Faking News: Fraudulent News and the Fight for Truth", alongside its "News Consumers Bill of Rights and Responsibilities."[46] Recent work focuses on how to fight disinformation ahead of the 2024 presidential election, with particular focus on Florida, Texas, and Arizona.[47]

Campus free speech

[edit]

PEN America has a focus on issues surrounding free speech at colleges and universities and seeks to raise awareness of the First Amendment and foster constructive dialogue that upholds the free speech rights of all on campus.[48] This work includes the "PEN America Principles on Campus Free Speech", and the report "And Campus for All: Diversity, Inclusion, and Freedom of Speech at U.S. Universities".[49]

Digital safety and online abuse

[edit]

In April 2018, PEN America launched the Online Harassment Field Manual in an effort to aid writers and journalists who must navigate online spaces by providing resources, tools, and tips to help them respond safely and effectively to incidents of online harassment and hateful speech.[50] PEN America also leads workshops to equip writers, journalists, and all those active online with tools and tactics to defend against hateful speech and trolling.

Artists at Risk Connection

[edit]

The Artists at Risk Connection is an international hub of more than 800 organizations working to protect artistic freedom around the world by improving access to resources for artists at risk, raising awareness of the threats, and enhancing connections among supporters of artistic freedom. This program extends support to artists of all kinds, encompassing writers, cartoonists, visual artists, filmmakers, musicians, and performance artists, as well as other individuals who produce significant creative output.[51]

Controversies

[edit]

War in Gaza

[edit]

Several authors requested that their names be removed from PEN referring to dissatisfaction with the organization's position regarding the Gaza war; among them were Camonghne Felix, nominated for the Jean Stein award, Eugenia Leigh, a poetry finalist and Ghassan Zeineddine, nominated for a short story. A letter signed by Naomi Klein, Lorrie Moore, and dozens of others protested that PEN had not “launched any substantial coordinated support” for Palestinians.

Chris Hedges reports in his The Chris Hedges Report website in March 2024, "[PEN's] refusal to condemn the deaths in Gaza and Israel’s targeted killings of writers, academics and journalists, has seen numerous writers withdraw from the annual PEN World Voices Festival in New York and Los Angeles, scheduled for April and May."[citation needed]

Cancellations

[edit]

PEN America canceled the 2024 World Voices festival and Literary Awards after 28 of the 61 nominated authors withdrew their books from consideration in the annual ceremony as they condemned America for failing to strongly condemn the alleged genocide in Palestine. [52]

The organization spoke out on a wide range of topics related to the war and its reverberations for free expression and pledged significant support to Palestinian writers, including a dedicated fund initially set at $100,000, to be administered by the PEN Emergency Fund, to support writers affected by the war.[53]

Labor

[edit]

Alex N. Press reports in Jacobin, May 1, 2024, "'PEN America management’s recent actions reflect what is becoming an appalling pattern of blatant disrespect towards its unionized staff,' said the union in a statement." And "The union has also filed two unfair labor practices (ULP) against PEN America with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB). The ULPs concern workers’ just-cause and labor-management committee proposals: workers say the company engaged in 'regressive bargaining' with both proposals, meaning they offered less than they had previously, after bringing on Tanya Khan from Kauff McGuire & Margolis, a union-busting law firm, late last year."

The following month, PEN America reached an agreement with its union.[54]

See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

PEN America is a founded in as the U.S. center of , dedicated to defending free expression and advancing literature by supporting writers facing , combating , and fostering global literary exchange. Its mission centers on uniting writers and allies to celebrate creative expression while safeguarding the liberties essential to it, operating as the largest among over 100 PEN centers worldwide.
The organization administers more than 20 literary awards, fellowships, and grants annually, distributing nearly $350,000 to recognize excellence in , , , , and other genres, with honors such as the PEN/Hemingway Award and PEN/Nabokov Award for international achievement. Programs include advocacy against book bans—documenting thousands of restrictions in U.S. schools—and initiatives like prison writing support, translation grants, and emergency assistance for threatened authors globally. PEN America has drawn controversy for perceived inconsistencies in its free speech advocacy, notably internal divisions over its response to the Israel-Hamas war, where hundreds of writers boycotted events and withdrew from awards, accusing the group of insufficient condemnation of Israel's actions in Gaza and uneven support for Palestinian voices. These tensions led to the cancellation of its World Voices festival and a "review" of operations, highlighting debates over whether PEN's commitments to neutrality compromise equitable defense of expression amid geopolitical conflicts.

History

Founding and Early Development

PEN International was founded on October 5, 1921, in by British writer Catharine Amy Dawson-Scott, who convened the first dinner meeting to foster international literary fellowship, with elected as its inaugural president. The organization's name originally stood for Poets, Essayists, and Novelists, later expanded to include Playwrights, Editors, and others, reflecting its aim to unite writers across genres and nations for mutual support and the promotion of literature beyond political boundaries. Initial members included prominent figures such as , , and , underscoring the gathering's emphasis on intellectual cooperation and free expression as antidotes to post-World War I divisions. PEN America emerged as the U.S. branch on , 1922, just months after the international body's establishment, with its founding meeting held at New York City's Coffee House Club and attended by about 40 writers. Initiated by and organized by American literary figures including Joseph Anthony, Alexander Black, and Maxwell Aley, the center elected as its first president, alongside early members such as , Eugene O’Neill, , and . The group's objectives aligned closely with PEN International's charter: advancing literature, defending writers' freedom of expression, and cultivating global friendships among authors to transcend national conflicts. In its formative 1920s phase, PEN America contributed to the nascent PEN network's expansion, participating in the inaugural International PEN Congress in in 1923, which drew delegates from 11 centers. Assigned to host the 1924 congress in New York, the center encountered financial hurdles, relying on modest annual dues of $5 per member, which limited resources but did not deter involvement in subsequent gatherings, such as the 1926 congress where Galsworthy advanced resolutions codifying PEN's commitment to literature's universality and protection amid rising geopolitical tensions. These early efforts established PEN America as a vanguard for cross-border literary solidarity, though operational growth remained constrained by volunteer-driven structures and nascent funding.

Mid-20th Century Expansion

In the years immediately following , the PEN American Center intensified its support for international writers affected by conflict and , distributing 1,233 care packages to overseas PEN members between 1942 and 1946. At the 1946 Congress in , the American Center introduced resolutions advocating for a free press and opposing government , marking an early push toward global free expression standards. By 1949, a resolution from the American Center contributed to gaining consultative status with the , enhancing its diplomatic influence. During the 1950s, amid tensions, the Center began addressing persecution of writers behind the and elsewhere, with members discussing the formation of a dedicated committee for imprisoned authors—a precursor to formalized advocacy. In 1959, it issued an signed by 259 members calling for the release of Hungarian writers Tibor Déry and Julius Hay, detained after the 1956 uprising, which succeeded the following year. This period saw increased international representation, such as attending the 1957 Tokyo Congress to support translators' professional status. The 1960s brought institutional expansion, including the establishment of the Writers in Prison Committee in 1960 to systematically track and intervene in cases of persecuted writers worldwide. Under Arthur Miller's leadership as PEN International President starting in 1964, the American Center created a Committee and hosted the 1966 New York Congress, despite visa denials for Soviet delegates highlighting East-West divides. Miller's efforts extended to high-profile interventions, such as securing the 1967 release of Nigerian playwright from detention. Domestically, the Center launched its Literary Awards in 1963, including a translation prize, and initiated grants and fellowships in 1966 to bolster literary support. By 1968, the organization acquired a permanent at the intersection of and 20th Street in , solidifying its operational base. Into the early 1970s, programs proliferated with the introduction of urban workshops under "P.E.N. in the City," a quarterly titled The American Pen, and the 1971 Prison Writing Program in response to the Prison uprising, reflecting broadened domestic engagement with incarcerated writers. These developments expanded the Center's scope from literary fellowship to structured advocacy and programming, amid growing awareness of global and U.S.-specific threats to expression.

Post-2000 Growth and Shifts

Following the , 2001 attacks, PEN America intensified its international advocacy, launching initiatives to protect writers and journalists in regions affected by conflict and heightened surveillance, including programs addressing post-9/11 threats to expression and abroad. The organization also adapted to emerging digital challenges, establishing early efforts on and countering online as the web became a primary platform for and dissent by the mid-2000s. These expansions coincided with a gradual broadening of membership to include more journalists, translators, and digital creators alongside traditional authors, fostering a more interdisciplinary approach to free expression. The appointment of as executive director in 2013 marked a pivotal phase of institutional scaling, with annual revenue rising from $4.3 million in 2013 to $25.8 million in 2022, driven largely by increased grants and contributions that supported staff growth from dozens to over 100 employees. This financial expansion enabled the proliferation of data-driven reports and indices, such as the annual Freedom to Write Index tracking imprisoned writers globally, and diversified programming into areas like and press safety. Membership swelled to exceed 4,500 individuals, encompassing novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, editors, and publishers nationwide, reflecting deliberate outreach to underrepresented voices in literary and advocacy spheres. Programmatic shifts emphasized domestic cultural flashpoints, with PEN America producing influential analyses on campus free speech divisions in reports like "Chasm in the Classroom" (2019), which documented ideological tensions in higher education environments, and expanding into educational policy through tracking of book removals starting in 2021. By 2023, the organization had cataloged over 4,000 school challenges since mid-2021, predominantly involving titles addressing race, sexuality, and , framing these as systemic threats to literary access. This pivot from primarily global literary defense to U.S.-centric battles over and libraries amplified PEN America's visibility in policy debates but also invited scrutiny for prioritizing certain vectors—often aligned with conservative state actions—over others, amid broader questions about institutional selectivity in free speech advocacy.

Governance and Operations

Leadership and Board of Trustees

PEN America's governance is provided by a Board of Trustees, which offers strategic oversight and vision for the organization's activities in literature and free expression advocacy. , an author of 18 books including (2003), was elected President of the Board on December 11, 2023, succeeding ; she has served on the board since 2018 and previously as vice president. Dinaw Mengestu, a and writer, serves as a of the Board. Executive operations are led by Interim Co-Chief Executive Officers Summer Lopez, Director of Free Expression, and Clarisse Rosaz Shariyf, Chief Program Officer for Literary Programming, who were elevated to these roles on October 31, 2024, following the departure of longtime CEO after a tenure marked by internal controversies over the organization's response to global events including the October 7, 2023, attacks on . Lopez oversees advocacy against and book restrictions, while Shariyf manages literary programs and events; both have held senior positions at PEN America since at least 2015. Other key board officers include Tracy Higgins as Executive Vice President and Marie Arana as Secretary. The board also features members such as publisher Peter Barbey and former CEO , reflecting ties to the literary and publishing industries. The full board, composed of writers, editors, and philanthropists, meets to guide policy amid ongoing challenges like funding disputes and membership withdrawals reported in 2023-2024.

Funding Sources and Financial Transparency

PEN America, a 501(c)(3) , derives the majority of its revenue from contributions and . In 2023, these sources accounted for $21,226,060, representing approximately 97% of total revenue of $21,777,695. Program service revenue, including ticket sales and program fees, contributed $246,464, while investment income added $444,575 and other revenue $214,935. In 2022, contributions and similarly dominated, totaling $24,853,259 out of $25,786,149 in overall revenue. Notable funders include foundations such as the , which awarded a $1.4 million grant in August 2025 to support initiatives amid book challenges. The has provided support for PEN America's programs, including grants for literary and free expression work. Individual donors have also contributed significantly, with author donating $2 million in September 2022 to enhance communications capacity, and the Edwin Barbey Charitable Trust providing a $10 million gift in October 2021 for organizational growth. At the end of 2023, approximately 21% of contributions receivable stemmed from a single donor, highlighting reliance on major gifts. PEN America maintains financial transparency by publicly posting its IRS filings and audited consolidated on its website, pen.org, covering recent years including 2023 and 2022. As a nonprofit, it adheres to standard IRS requirements for disclosing aggregated revenue sources but does not publicly itemize all individual donors below certain thresholds, a practice common among similar organizations. Critics, including some writers and groups, have called for greater detail on grant allocations, such as funds for incarcerated writers' programs, arguing that existing disclosures lack specificity on spending outcomes. In response to broader controversies, including demands in 2024, PEN America has faced pressure for an independent to address perceived opacity in grant usage. Despite these critiques, rates PEN America highly for accountability and finance, with full points for availability of audited statements and .

Literary Programs

Awards and Literary Recognition

PEN America administers the PEN Literary Awards, established in 1963 to honor exceptional literary works across genres including , , , biography, , science writing, essays, sports writing, and . The program recognizes diverse , with an emphasis on and , annually awarding more than 20 prizes, fellowships, and totaling over $370,000 to writers and translators. These awards have historically supported emerging and established authors, fostering global literary discourse through categories that highlight underrepresented perspectives and translational excellence. Key awards include the PEN/Hemingway Award for Debut Novel, which provides $10,000 to a first-time novelist demonstrating outstanding promise. The PEN/Jean Stein Book Award offers $75,000 for a groundbreaking work of fiction or nonfiction that advances artistic risk-taking. Other prominent prizes encompass the PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry Collection ($5,000), the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay ($15,000), and the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award, which celebrates contributions bridging science and literature. The PEN Open Book Award ($10,000) specifically acknowledges works by authors of color addressing themes of race and identity. Winners are selected by panels of literary experts, with longlists and finalists announced annually; for instance, the 2025 awards conferred nearly $350,000 across multiple categories during a ceremony on May 8 in . An archive of past recipients, such as Divya Victor for Curb in 2022 (PEN Open Book) and for Dr. No in 2023 (PEN/Jean Stein), underscores the program's role in elevating influential voices. These recognitions have contributed to career advancements for laureates, though selections occasionally draw scrutiny for subjective criteria amid broader debates on literary merit.

Festivals and Events

PEN America organizes a range of public events centered on literature, free expression, and advocacy, including workshops, readings, and high-profile gatherings that feature authors, translators, and activists. These programs aim to foster dialogue on global literary traditions and threats to writers, often held in New York City with some extension to other locations. The flagship event is the PEN World Voices Festival of International Literature, founded in 2004 by Salman Rushdie, Esther Allen, and Michael Roberts as PEN America's premier celebration of global writing and translation. Typically spanning several days in spring, the festival hosts panels, readings, and performances with over 100 writers from dozens of countries, addressing themes like democracy, displacement, and creativity amid censorship. The 2024 edition was canceled after 28 of 61 nominated authors withdrew in protest over PEN America's perceived insufficient criticism of Israel's actions in Gaza following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, highlighting tensions within literary communities regarding the organization's advocacy balance. The festival resumed in 2025 from April 30 to May 3, drawing participants from 35 countries to reaffirm commitments to storytelling against authoritarian pressures. Another major annual event is the PEN America Literary Gala, a fundraising occasion that convenes prominent writers, publishers, and philanthropists in New York to honor literary achievements and raise awareness of free expression issues. The 2025 gala, held on May 15 at the , featured tributes from figures like actor and emphasized responses to contemporary divisions, despite prior protests linked to the same Gaza-related disputes that affected other PEN programming. These galas have historically generated significant funds for PEN's initiatives, blending celebrity appearances with advocacy appeals. Additional events include PEN Out Loud readings, author evenings, and advocacy-focused workshops, which provide platforms for emerging and imprisoned writers' voices, often free or low-cost to broaden public access. In 2025, PEN also participated in broader literary fairs like the Book Festival, offering memberships and giveaways to engage attendees on free expression themes.

Writing Support Initiatives

PEN America's U.S. Writers Aid Initiative, part of the Writers Emergency Fund, provides one-time emergency grants to professional writers based in the United States who face acute financial needs due to unforeseen circumstances such as medical issues or natural disasters. Eligible applicants include and authors, poets, playwrights, translators, and journalists with established publication records, but exclude self-published writers, students in degree programs, or those seeking funds for writing-related expenses like equipment or residencies. Applications are accepted quarterly, with deadlines such as January 10, May 2, July 15, and November 13 in 2025, and are reviewed by a volunteer requiring documentation of need. The organization also administers literary grants to support works-in-progress across genres including , , , , and . Notable programs include the PEN/Heim Translation Fund, which funds translation projects selected by juries of writers, editors, and translators, with 2025 recipients announced for projects demonstrating literary impact. Other grants, such as the PEN/Jean Stein Grants for Literary and the PEN/Bare Life Review Grants targeting immigrant and writers, provide targeted support for underrepresented voices and innovative formats, with awards typically in the range of $5,000 per grant. Fellowships and workshops further bolster writing development, particularly for early-career and marginalized creators. The Emerging Voices Fellowship offers a five-month virtual mentorship program for writers from communities including Black, Indigenous, LGBTQ+, immigrant, disabled, or non-urban backgrounds, providing one-on-one guidance, industry access to editors and agents, masterclasses on editing and marketing, and an optional in-person workshop in Los Angeles. Complementary initiatives include the DREAMing Out Loud workshop series for migrant writers, which is paid and tuition-free, focusing on short stories, poetry, or essays culminating in public readings; Poets Across Lines, offering financial and material aid for poets addressing themes like housing and immigration; and Books That Saved Me, a summer workshop inspiring poems from banned books to foster intergenerational dialogue. These programs aim to equip participants with practical skills for sustaining literary careers while prioritizing diversification in publishing.

Publications and Resources

PEN America publishes annual indexes and reports focused on threats to free expression, including educational censorship and global writer imprisonments. The organization's Index of School Book Bans, first released in 2022, documents instances of book removals from U.S. public schools, with the 2024-2025 edition recording 6,870 bans across 23 states and 87 districts, attributing the rise to organized efforts targeting titles on race, gender, and sexuality. Similarly, the Freedom to Write Index provides a yearly tally of writers imprisoned worldwide for their work, emphasizing cases in countries like , , and , with data drawn from PEN's advocacy monitoring since 2020. Key reports include "The Normalization of Book Banning," published October 1, 2025, which analyzes over 22,000 book restrictions in U.S. schools from July 2021 to June 2025 across 45 states, claiming a shift toward institutionalized via laws and policies. Other publications cover related topics, such as "America's Censored 2024," tracking state-level educational gag orders that limit discussions on history and identity, and "The Blueprint State," examining legislative models for restricting content. These reports often rely on media scans, legal filings, and direct reports from educators, though critics have questioned the inclusion of temporary removals or challenges as full "bans." Beyond indexes, PEN America issues practical resources for combating and supporting expression. The Index of Educational Gag Orders compiles state bills and laws since 2021 that impose restrictions, updated periodically with legislative analysis. Guides like "Equity in Publishing: A Resource Guide" () offer readings on and representation in literary production, while the "Campus Free Speech Guide" provides tools for students and faculty navigating speech disputes. Additional materials include the "Online Harassment Field Manual" for addressing digital abuse and "Facts Forward," a toolkit for journalists countering . PEN America also maintains newsletters such as PEN America News, which delivers bi-weekly updates on campaigns, author events, and policy developments, and Works of Justice, focusing on writing and rehabilitation programs. These publications and resources support the organization's dual mission in and , often distributed freely via their website to educators, writers, and activists.

Advocacy Efforts

Campaigns Against Educational Restrictions

PEN America initiated its tracking of school book restrictions with the launch of the Index of School Book Bans in April 2022, documenting instances where books were removed from public school libraries and classrooms due to challenges based on content. The organization defines a "book ban" as any removal or restriction resulting from , , or legislative actions targeting specific viewpoints or themes, often including temporary withdrawals during processes. By the 2022-2023 school year, PEN reported 3,362 such instances affecting 1,557 unique titles, a 33% increase from the prior year, with subsequent reports showing escalation: 6,870 instances across 23 states and 87 districts in 2024-2025, led by (2,304 cases) and (1,781 cases). These campaigns have focused on publishing annual reports such as Banned in the USA and The Normalization of Book Banning, which argue that restrictions constitute unprecedented driven by organized groups and state laws, disproportionately targeting books on race, gender, and sexuality. PEN has advocated against legislation in states like and , criticizing laws such as Florida's HB 1557 (2022) and Texas's SB 12 and SB 13 (2023) for prompting widespread removals through vague standards on "." The group has supported lawsuits, including amicus briefs challenging Texas's READER Act as unconstitutional for enabling overbroad restrictions, and collaborated with publishers and families to contest removals in districts like those in and . Critics of PEN's methodology contend that it inflates ban counts by including routine reviews or temporary holds—such as a book pulled for a few weeks pending age-appropriateness checks—as full bans, rather than distinguishing permanent prohibitions from standard curation processes. Organizations like , which support parental oversight, argue that many challenged titles contain explicit sexual descriptions unsuitable for minors, framing removals as efforts to ensure age-appropriate materials rather than ideological suppression. PEN's reports link 31% of 2022 bans to laws in , , and , but independent analyses note that such legislation often codifies existing standards, with challenges frequently upheld after formal reviews confirming explicit content. Despite these disputes, PEN has sustained public awareness efforts, including Banned Books Week resolutions and data visualizations, claiming over 22,800 cumulative instances since 2021 across 45 states.

Protection for At-Risk Writers

PEN America maintains the PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Center to coordinate advocacy for writers facing imprisonment, harassment, or exile due to their expression globally. This center oversees case-by-case interventions, including public campaigns for releases and awards such as the annual PEN/Barbey Freedom to Write Award, which recognizes jailed writers like Uyghur scholar , imprisoned in since 2014, and Egyptian poet Galal El-Behairy, detained in 2025. The organization tracks threats through its Writers at Risk Database, a searchable repository of verified cases involving writers, journalists, and intellectuals under duress in various countries. Complementing this, the annual Freedom to Write Index quantifies imprisoned writers, reporting 375 individuals detained in 40 countries during 2024—a record high compared to 339 in 2023—based on rigorous verification of detentions linked to expressive work. These efforts emphasize governments' use of , , and medical denial against detainees, drawing from direct case research. For practical support, PEN America administers the U.S. Writers Initiative, offering one-time to professional U.S.-based authors, poets, and translators hit by acute financial emergencies unrelated to writing, with decisions made quarterly by peer committees. typically range from $500 to $1,000, escalating to $2,000 in extreme cases, aimed at short-term crises like issues or disasters. Internationally, the Emergency Fund for Endangered Writers provides targeted legal and medical aid to persecuted individuals, including those in prison, though funding prioritizes advocacy over broad relocation. In , PEN America expanded protections by joining the Journalist Assistance Network, supplying free safety training, , and immigration resources to threatened media professionals amid rising global repression. These initiatives focus on documentation and pressure tactics rather than on-the-ground security, reflecting resource constraints in direct intervention.

Press Freedom and Disinformation Initiatives

PEN America advocates for press freedom through monitoring threats to journalists, providing safety resources, and supporting local media initiatives. The organization tracks incidents of journalist , arrests, and killings globally and domestically, emphasizing the role of in countering centralized narratives. In 2018, PEN America expanded its Press Freedom Incentive Fund to over 20 U.S. cities, offering grants and training to bolster independent reporting amid declining outlets. This fund prioritizes underserved areas where press access is limited, aiming to sustain investigative work on issues like government accountability. The group has issued statements criticizing specific policy actions perceived as undermining journalistic access, such as the U.S. Department of Defense's October 2025 restrictions on reporters refusing to sign new accreditation rules, which PEN America described as a "dark day" for U.S. press freedoms by limiting independent coverage of military operations. Similarly, in March 2025, PEN America co-signed a letter with 27 organizations opposing an to restructure the U.S. Agency for Global Media, arguing it would curtail and expose journalists to retaliation. On , observed annually on May 3, PEN America highlights community media's contributions to diverse viewpoints, as in its 2022 events focusing on grassroots outlets' resilience against consolidation. To address journalist safety, PEN America provides digital security training and resources, including workshops on mitigating online abuse, , and hacking for reporters, scholars, and activists. In May 2025, it joined the Journalist Assistance Network, a coalition with groups like the , offering legal aid, immigration support, and risk assessment for threatened media workers, particularly immigrants facing deportation risks tied to their reporting. Additional guides cover device protection during protests and management, drawing from expert webinars held as recently as January 2025. PEN America's disinformation initiatives focus on community-level responses rather than top-down , framing as a to informed that erodes trust in institutions. Through the and program, launched to build local resilience, the organization conducted studies in cities like , , and Phoenix, documenting how residents encounter false narratives on and , and recommending over . The "Knowing the News" project delivers curricula with virtual workshops and tip sheets, teaching verification techniques such as cross-referencing primary sources and identifying algorithmic biases, with applications extended to seasons via guides on spotting manipulated content. In March 2025, a briefing evaluated program outcomes, advocating sustained local dialogues to foster skepticism toward unverified claims without restricting speech. These efforts position as a free expression challenge, prioritizing empowerment through information hygiene over platform interventions, though critics argue such approaches may underemphasize state-sponsored deception from adversarial regimes.

Campus and Digital Free Speech Advocacy

PEN America has advocated for free expression on U.S. college campuses by emphasizing the protection of speech alongside principles of diversity and inclusion, arguing that campuses must remain open to all ideas to foster civic discourse. In April 2019, the organization published the report Chasm in the Classroom: Campus Free Speech in a Divided America, which analyzed over 100 recent speech-related controversies and disputed claims of a free speech "," attributing tensions to broader societal divisions rather than systemic institutional failure. The report, informed by tracking incidents since at least 2016, recommended institutional practices to navigate divisive speech without suppressing viewpoints. To support campus stakeholders, PEN America developed the Campus Free Speech Guide, a resource offering practical advice for students, faculty, and administrators on maintaining open inquiry amid controversies. Since 2016, it has conducted Campus for All workshops nationwide, training participants on free speech fundamentals and , in collaboration with higher education experts. Additional efforts include the Campus Advocates Fellowship, which in 2025 mentored student ambassadors to promote free expression and counter academic restrictions, such as those from state legislation targeted by its Freedom to Learn program. In digital spaces, PEN America addresses threats to free expression through its work on online abuse and digital safety, focusing on harassment, doxxing, and intimidation that disproportionately target writers, journalists, and marginalized voices such as women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ individuals. The organization provides the Online Abuse Defense Training Program, equipping newsrooms, publishers, universities, and libraries with tools for digital, physical, legal, and psychological safety to prevent self-censorship. PEN America has collaborated with coalitions like the Global Network Initiative to establish benchmarks for protecting freedom of expression and privacy in digital communications, opposing tactics that undermine speech through fear. Recent publications, including analyses of email threats in "Danger in the Inbox" (October 2024) and the real-world spillover of online mobs (July 2024), highlight how such abuses escalate to offline harm, informing policy advocacy for platform accountability without endorsing broad content moderation.

Key Positions and Responses to Events

Stance on School Book Challenges

PEN America characterizes parental and community challenges to books in public school libraries and curricula as a form of censorship that restricts students' intellectual freedom and exposure to diverse viewpoints. The organization defines a "book ban" broadly as any school action to remove, restrict, or limit access to a title due to objections over its content, including temporary removals pending review or relocations to restricted sections. This stance frames such challenges as threats to First Amendment principles, particularly when targeting books addressing race, gender, sexuality, or history, which PEN argues disproportionately affect marginalized narratives. In annual reports, PEN America documents rising instances of these actions, reporting 10,046 book bans across U.S. public schools in the 2023–2024 academic year, impacting 4,231 unique titles, followed by 6,870 instances in 2024–2025 across 23 states and 87 districts. Their analyses claim 25–36% of banned titles feature LGBTQ+ characters or themes and a similar proportion involve people or characters of color, attributing patterns to organized efforts by groups using templated complaints and . PEN has responded with , including lawsuits alongside publishers and parents against restrictions in states like , and resources like searchable ban indexes to mobilize opposition. Critics from parental rights organizations, such as , argue PEN America's position overlooks objections to explicit sexual content in many challenged titles—often graphic depictions unsuitable for audiences—and misrepresents routine curriculum reviews as ideological suppression, prioritizing unrestricted access over age-appropriateness and local control. 's methodology, which tallies each removal or restriction per school rather than formal complaints, yields figures far exceeding the American Library Association's 821 challenges logged for 2024, leading some to contend it inflates perceptions by including non-permanent measures like investigative holds. Libertarian perspectives further critique PEN's advocacy as defending state-managed school content against parental input, suggesting the core issue lies in public education's monopoly on taxpayer-funded materials rather than specific titles, and advocating to resolve disputes over appropriateness. PEN America counters that such challenges erode by substituting subjective discomfort for professional curation, citing empirical patterns of coordinated national campaigns as of systemic rather than isolated concerns.

Involvement in International Conflicts

PEN America has documented and advocated against Russia's systematic attacks on Ukrainian cultural infrastructure during the full-scale invasion that began on February 24, 2022, including the destruction of libraries, museums, and theaters, as well as the persecution of writers and artists expressing opposition to the war. In a December 2022 report titled Ukrainian Culture Under Attack, the organization detailed over 200 verified incidents of such targeting by Russian forces up to October 2022, framing these actions as deliberate efforts to erase Ukrainian identity, in violation of . This included the bombing of the Ivankiv Historical and Local History Museum, which housed works by artist , and strikes on publishing houses and literary archives in cities like and . The organization has monitored the deaths of Ukrainian writers, journalists, and cultural figures, collaborating with PEN Ukraine to track at least 117 such fatalities by mid-2023, often resulting from direct targeting or indiscriminate shelling in occupied or frontline areas. PEN America submitted a report in late 2023 to the Council's Independent International Commission of Inquiry on , providing evidence of these cultural attacks as part of broader war crimes, urging accountability for violations under the . Additionally, it issued open letters calling for international support for displaced Ukrainian writers and journalists, emphasizing the need for emergency relocation and financial aid amid the . In , PEN America has highlighted the escalation of repression against writers since the , with dozens imprisoned for anti-war statements, , or novels critiquing the conflict, including cases like that of poet Sergey Gandlevsky, detained in 2022 for social media posts opposing . The group advocated for the release of such detainees through public campaigns and diplomatic appeals, noting over 20 writers prosecuted under Article 207.3 of the Russian Criminal Code for "discrediting the armed forces" by mid-2023. These efforts align with PEN America's broader Writers at Risk program, which provided relocation grants and legal support to affected individuals fleeing tied to the war. Beyond , PEN America's involvement in other international conflicts has been more limited, focusing on responses rather than sustained campaigns; for instance, it condemned attacks on journalists in Syria's through periodic statements but did not produce dedicated reports comparable to those on . The organization's international prioritizes regions with direct impacts on literary freedom, such as supporting Afghan writers post-2021 Taliban takeover via emergency funds, though without framing it as an ongoing armed conflict.

Approach to Campus Protests and Speech Codes

PEN America has articulated principles emphasizing the protection of free expression on university campuses, arguing that institutions should uphold open inquiry while fostering diversity and inclusion. In its 2019 "Principles on Campus Free Speech," the organization asserts that protests and expressive activities, even if disruptive, constitute manifestations of free speech rather than threats to it, provided they do not violate others' rights to speak or access events. The group opposes content-based restrictions, such as speech codes that penalize viewpoints deemed offensive, viewing them as incompatible with First Amendment protections at public universities and broader academic freedom norms at private ones. PEN America has critiqued historical campus speech codes from the 1980s onward as fostering "political correctness" that stifles debate, advocating instead for viewpoint-neutral time, place, and manner regulations. Regarding speech codes, PEN America has actively opposed legislative efforts to impose restrictions on campus discourse, such as "divisive concepts" bans targeting discussions of race, , or . In 2022, alongside the American Association of Colleges and Universities, it condemned these measures as educational gag orders that undermine . The organization has also challenged state laws limiting speech, including a 2025 endorsement of a federal against parts of a statute restricting campus expression. PEN America's Campus Free Speech Guide provides administrators, faculty, and students with tools to navigate tensions between hateful speech and counter-speech, rejecting outright bans in favor of robust debate and institutional neutrality. In addressing campus protests, PEN America defends the right to demonstrate as integral to free speech, particularly during contentious events like the 2023–2024 Israel-Hamas war-related encampments. It signed a May 2024 statement from the Organization of American Historians expressing concern over police use of force against peaceful Gaza protesters on campuses, including at and the . The group criticized universities for responses it deemed excessive, such as mass arrests and suspensions, while cautioning against measures like expanded speech codes or DEI defunding threats that could chill under the guise of combating . In an August 2024 analysis, PEN America warned that preemptive rules risk overreach, urging institutions to prioritize over suppression. This stance aligns with its broader for countering offensive speech through more speech rather than , though it has drawn scrutiny for perceived leniency toward rhetoric crossing into .

Controversies and Criticisms

Response to Israel-Hamas War and Alleged Biases

PEN America issued a statement on October 10, 2023, condemning the Hamas-led attack on three days prior, which killed approximately 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and highlighted the deaths of writers, artists, and festival attendees at the Nova . The organization expressed solidarity with those affected and emphasized the protection of civilians and free expression amid the ensuing conflict. Subsequent statements from PEN America mourned the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, called for a , and established a $100,000 emergency fund to support affected writers and artists in the region. In June 2025, PEN America urged that starvation not be weaponized in Gaza and advocated for the of civilians, including writers, in response to the ongoing Israeli operations initiated after the attack. By September 2025, the organization released a report titled "All That Is Lost," documenting the destruction of Gaza's — including over 80% of cultural and educational sites damaged or destroyed—and accusing Israel's campaign of constituting war crimes, , and evidence of genocidal intent, while calling for an immediate halt to attacks on Palestinian cultural infrastructure. PEN America also criticized Israeli policies restricting free expression, such as a January 2025 law criminalizing denial or minimization of the atrocities, deeming it a dangerous precedent for speech. Critics, primarily writers and affiliates aligned with pro-Palestinian advocacy, accused PEN America of bias toward , equivocation, and insufficient condemnation of Gaza operations following the initial statement, leading to boycotts of events like the 2024 World Voices Festival and the cancellation of the PEN Literary Awards in April 2024 after over 200 authors withdrew participation. An signed by more than 500 writers in February 2024 faulted PEN for issuing nearly two dozen statements since that allegedly prioritized Israeli perspectives and failed to adequately address Palestinian suffering. Some former staff claimed PEN repressed Palestinian voices, with one alleging termination in March 2024 for advocating stronger support for Gaza-related expression, though PEN described such actions as consistent with its mission. PEN America, in a March 2024 letter to its community, acknowledged accusations of , anti-Palestinian bias, double standards, and complicity from various quarters, attributing internal —including staff protests and resignations—to polarized expectations over its balanced free expression . Critics from pro-Palestinian groups further alleged PEN's historical ties, such as past sponsorships linked to , contributed to perceived normalization of policies they term apartheid, prompting calls for boycotts of PEN's literary prizes. These controversies reflect broader tensions in literary circles, where sources like advocacy-driven outlets (e.g., ) emphasize alleged pro- leanings, while PEN's documentation of expression restrictions in both and Palestinian territories underscores its institutional focus on speech over geopolitical alignment.

Internal Organizational Conflicts

In May 2023, PEN America board member resigned after the organization disinvited two Russian writers from a panel at its World Voices Festival following objections from Ukrainian writers, a decision Gessen criticized as undermining free expression principles by yielding to external pressure. As board , Gessen was tasked with notifying the writers, which they described as untenable for a free-speech advocate, stating that PEN could not justify excluding speakers based on others' objections. CEO later acknowledged that the handling "should have found a better approach," highlighting internal tensions over consistent application of PEN's mission amid geopolitical sensitivities from the Russia-Ukraine war. These frictions intensified in December 2023 when 41 staffers sent a letter to expressing "continued concerns about the organization's shortcomings" in responding to the Gaza crisis following the attacks, accusing PEN of inconsistent free-expression advocacy and neglecting threats to Palestinian writers. The staff criticized Nossel's planned trip to as potentially eroding credibility and argued that PEN's stance appeared to align with one side, failing to robustly defend Palestinian voices amid widespread cultural site destruction. defended its efforts to protect expression on all sides but faced ongoing internal pushback, contributing to broader organizational strain. By March 2024, during union contract negotiations that had begun in October 2022, PEN America United accused management of proposing policies that would "chill the free expression of its own workers" by allowing discipline for off-duty political activities—such as signing open letters or attending protests—if deemed to impact the organization's mission. This included vague introduced on March 14, 2024, which the union viewed as contradictory to PEN's core values, especially amid Gaza-related criticisms where staff had advocated for stronger humanitarian positions. PEN responded by affirming it does not interfere with employees' personal expression and proposed removing the contested , citing compliance needs as a nonprofit, though the incident underscored perceived in internal speech .

Labor Disputes and Staff Relations

In June 2022, PEN America employees voted to unionize under PEN America United (PAU), an affiliate of the NewsGuild-CWA, representing approximately 30 staff members in roles such as program officers and communications specialists. The union's formation followed broader trends in nonprofit and media sectors amid post-pandemic labor organizing, with initial demands focusing on wage increases, remote work policies, and protections against burnout in a grant-funded organization. Contract negotiations, which began shortly after union certification, extended over 21 months, prompting accusations from PAU that management was deliberately slow-walking the process. By May 2024, the union had filed two unfair labor practice charges with the (NLRB), alleging bad-faith bargaining tactics, including delays in responding to proposals on compensation and workload equity. A key flashpoint emerged in March 2024 when PAU criticized management's proposed contract language, which it described as imposing restrictions on employees' external political activities and potentially allowing discipline for public statements conflicting with organizational positions, thereby undermining PEN America's free expression principles. PEN America management countered that the proposals aimed to balance organizational neutrality with staff autonomy, issuing a statement affirming no interference in employees' personal or political expression. The protracted talks overlapped with heightened internal tensions over PEN's programming, including Gaza-related advocacy, which some staff argued diverted resources from labor priorities. On July 10, 2024, the parties reached a tentative first agreement, ratified later that month, which included gains such as minimum salary floors starting at $65,000 and enhanced , though specific details on grievance procedures remained under review by the NLRB for the pending charges. Staff relations have also involved isolated terminations tied to speech disputes, such as the March 2025 firing of employee Kori Davis after an internal investigation into his sharing of an article critical of , which he claimed violated PEN's mission; management cited policy violations but did not publicly detail the rationale. These incidents, while not formal union grievances, fueled broader critiques from PAU about inconsistent application of free speech standards internally, contrasting with PEN's external advocacy. No work stoppages or strikes occurred, but the disputes highlighted tensions between the organization's advocacy for writers' rights and its handling of employee organizing.

Broader Critiques of Advocacy Priorities

Critics have contended that PEN America's advocacy disproportionately emphasizes domestic educational , particularly school book challenges often initiated by conservative parents over content involving LGBTQ+ themes, race, or sexuality, while allocating fewer resources to other free expression threats, such as of dissenting voices in academic or digital spaces dominated by progressive norms. For instance, PEN America's annual reports have documented over 10,000 book removals or restrictions in U.S. public schools since 2021, framing them as a surge in driven by organized campaigns. However, organizations like argue that PEN inflates these figures by classifying routine reviews of explicit or age-inappropriate materials—such as books containing graphic sexual descriptions—as outright bans, thereby prioritizing a of right-wing over parental curriculum oversight. This selective emphasis extends to PEN's relative reticence on left-originated pressures, including dynamics where authors withdraw or revise works amid public outrage over perceived insensitivity, despite PEN issuing reports acknowledging such "booklash" effects. Critics, including literary figures, assert that PEN's commitments to equity and inclusion sometimes eclipse impartial free speech defense, leading to uneven scrutiny of viewpoint suppression across ideological lines. For example, while PEN vigorously opposes educational gag orders restricting discussions of systemic or , it has faced less internal pushback for not equally challenging institutional preferences for DEI frameworks that may marginalize non-conforming perspectives. Further scrutiny targets PEN's allocation of resources, with former employees alleging that millions in funding for prison writing initiatives—intended to support incarcerated authors—have been redirected toward administrative or promotional activities rather than direct aid for those behind bars, undermining claims of equitable advocacy for marginalized writers. This has prompted accusations of mission drift, where high-profile domestic campaigns overshadow core humanitarian efforts for vulnerable global or domestic populations facing severe expression barriers, such as journalists in authoritarian regimes or writers in U.S. prisons.

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