PEN America works tirelessly to defend free expression, support persecuted writers, and promote literary culture. Here are some of the latest ways PEN America is speaking out.

  • In a new statement, PEN America said starvation must not be used as a weapon of war, and called for the protection of human rights of writers and all civilians in Gaza. Read the statement.
  • PEN America, along with the Florida Freedom to Read Project (FFTRP), published a new report on how the “parental rights” narrative has delivered control not into the hands of all parents but to a tiny segment of citizensโ€”some not even parentsโ€”whose overriding goal is censorship. Itโ€™s a dangerous blueprint now being emulated across the country and at the national level. Read the Blueprint State Report, our press release, and coverage in Publishers Weekly and Words and Money.
  • PEN America called President Trumpโ€™s request to cut funding, which Congress already has approved, for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, “a blatant attempt to sway or silence media outlets that donโ€™t align with the presidentโ€™s preferred narrative, a tactic heโ€™s already used repeatedly.” Read our full statement here, and coverage in The Guardian.ย 
  • PEN America criticized the latest travel bans mandated by the White House. Hadar Harris, managing director of PEN Americaโ€™s Washington, D.C. office, said, โ€œThey destabilize the world by creating barriers to the free exchange of ideas and culture. Travel bans are an autocratic move that reinforce a xenophobic agenda, inhibit critical thinking, and narrow world views.โ€ Read our full statement here.
  • PEN America announced its latest cohorts for the Emerging Voices Workshop in Los Angeles. Learn more and meet them here
  • Flags are under fire as latest targets of censorship in some states in the country. More than a dozen states have recently enacted or are considering bans on diverse flags — such as those celebrating Pride or Black Lives Matter — in public schools or on government property.  Read our blog about it here.
  • At PEN Americaโ€™s World Voices Festival 2025, Mexican novelist Guadalupe Nettel, Argentine novelist Gabriela Cabezรณn Cรกmara and Uruguayan author Fernanda Trรญas came together for a panel on Latin American writers and literature. Read our rundown here.ย 

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