Florida considers expanding school book restrictions

Florida lawmakers are proposing further changes to a law restricting books that describe sexual conduct in public schools. The state leads the country in book bans and faces criticism for potentially more draconian measures.

Florida currently leads the nation in the number of book bans, according to a Book Riot report published on March 17, 2026. The article highlights a new development: “A Florida bill is proposing further changes to a controversial law preventing books that ‘describe sexual conduct’ from being in public schools.” This is presented alongside a related note on Florida eyeing new tactics for school book bans amid ongoing censorship discussions. The publication describes the potential expansion as making Florida's book banning bills even more draconian. The story appears in a round-up of library and censorship news, which also covers federal library funding under Trump and various state-level challenges, but centers Florida's leadership in restrictions. No specific bill number, sponsor details, or timeline for passage are provided in the source. Book Riot frames this within broader trends, including nationwide efforts and opposition from groups like the American Library Association.

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Tense clash at Texas education board meeting between conservatives and Muslim advocates over social studies curriculum on Islam.
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Texas education board faces clash over Islam references as it revises social studies standards

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The Texas State Board of Education is considering draft changes to the state’s social studies curriculum amid competing demands from Muslim advocacy groups and conservative activists and lawmakers. Congressional Republicans have urged the board to reject what they describe as an organized lobbying push tied to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), while CAIR disputes accusations of extremism and is suing Texas Gov. Greg Abbott over his proclamation labeling the group a “foreign terrorist organization.”

Utah has added two more titles—A Stolen Life by Jaycee Dugard and A Clash of Kings by George R.R. Martin—to its statewide list of books prohibited in public schools, bringing the total to 34. This follows the addition of four books just 10 days ago and continues the rapid expansion under House Bill 29.

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Utah has banned four additional books from all public schools, increasing the total number of prohibited titles to 32. The new additions, made late last week, include Life Is Funny by E.R. Frank, The Haters by Jesse Andrews, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, and People Kill People by Ellen Hopkins. This development follows the implementation of House Bill 29 in 2024.

The Teton County Library Board of Directors adopted a resolution opposing H.R. 7661 on May 21, 2026. The measure targets materials in school libraries nationwide.

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The University of Nebraska at Kearney has banned a textbook on human sexuality following a student complaint that the material constituted pornography.

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