Lillehammer June 2, 2026

The World Expression Forum (WEXFO) 2026 takes place at a time when freedom of expression is under growing attack.

Speaking out is becoming more difficult. Not only because of censorship and repression, but because fear, polarization, hostility, and distrust force more people to self-censor.

This affects all forms of expression. When people fall silent, power goes unchallenged, societies become more divided, and democracy weakens.

Disagreement is a core part of democracy. It allows ideas to be tested, perspectives to be shared, and societies to develop. Democracy is weakened when people choose to be silent out of fear but thrives when the right to disagree is upheld or respected.

We must be willing to listen, even when we disagree, including when those who challenge us question perspectives that are deeply connected to our identities. We must not dehumanize those whose views differ from our own.This does not mean abandoning our convictions. It means defending the space where disagreement can exist without fear.

Around the world, journalists, writers, artists, academics, activists, and ordinary citizens continue to face intimidation, exclusion, violence, and rising authoritarianism for expressing their views. Their protection is essential to preserving free and open societies. Their courage reminds us that freedom of expression is not an abstract principle. It is a lived reality that must be defended every day.

Digital platforms have opened the door to more voices than ever before, but they have also made public debate faster, louder, and more polarized. Trust is weakening. It is becoming easier to dismiss those we disagree with and harder to engage in meaningful dialogue across differences.

At the same time, those who seek to limit freedom are becoming more strategic, coordinated, and effective. Defending freedom of expression today requires more than good intentions. It requires collective action.

We must protect the right to express dissent in all its forms, support those who face consequences for speaking out, and strengthen the conditions for open, inclusive, and informed public debate. We must ensure that young people are not only protected online, but also included in shaping the digital spaces where they learn, participate, and make their voices heard.

Democracy depends not on agreement, but on the ability to handle disagreement.

The World Expression Forum (WEXFO) calls for action:

  • We must organize, cooperate, and act with purpose to defend freedom of expression.
  • We must defend those who speak – and challenge ourselves to speak when it matters.
  • We must rebuild trust, reclaim nuance, and make space for constructive disagreement.
  • We must ensure that freedom of expression remains a right that belongs to everyone, and hold the torch high for those whose voices are marginalized, excluded, or left behind.

Last year, the World Expression Forum reminded us that “ordinary people create history.” This year, we affirm a simple truth: Freedom of expression survives when ordinary people choose participation over silence.

Pema Wangmo Lama awarded the WEXFO Young Inspiration Award

Nepali activist Pema Wangmo Lama (26) has been awarded the WEXFO Young Inspiration Award during the World Expression Forum in Lillehammer, Norway.

When the fabric of society unravels

When people withdraw from public debate because they cannot bear the aggression, the suspicion, or the online shaming, something in democracy has already changed.

Two new shareholders join the World Expression Forum

The World Expression Forum (WEXFO) welcomes Nansen Center for Peace and Dialogue and the Norwegian Authors’ Union as new shareholders.

WEXFO launches 2026 conference program exploring disagreement, power and the future of democracy

The World Expression Forum (WEXFO) has launched the program for WEXFO 2026, “The Freedom to Disagree” – an international conference addressing the shrinking space for disagreement worldwide.

WEXFO seeks Norwegian participants for More Young Voices 2026

World Expression Forum (WEXFO) is now inviting young people from Norway aged 18–25 to apply for WEXFO More Young Voices 2026 – an international Erasmus+ group exchange focused on freedom of expression, youth participation, and democratic engagement.

Arizza Nocum and Chetan Rastogi to host this year’s WEXFO conference

WEXFO 2026 will be guided on stage by program committee chair Arizza Nocum and journalist Chetan Rastogi as the conference convenes in Lillehammer on 1–2 June under the theme “The Freedom to Disagree.”

Louis Theroux to join WEXFO 2026 in Lillehammer

World Expression Forum (WEXFO) announces award-winning documentary presenter Louis Theroux as speaker at this year’s global freedom of expression conference in Lillehammer June, 1-3.

V-Dem 2026: Freedom of expression under historic pressure

The new V-Dem Democracy Report 2026, released today, paints a dark picture of the global state of democracy. For the average world citizen, democracy has regressed to 1978 levels – nearly wiping out the gains of the “third wave of democratization.”

Norwegian Prime Minister and Maria Ressa in in-depth conversation at WEXFO

Prime Minister of Norway Jonas Gahr Støre and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Ressa will meet on stage for an in-depth conversation on the opening day of the World Expression Forum (WEXFO), taking place in Lillehammer from 1–3 June.

WEXFO calls for the protection of freedom of expression following the arrest of Imaan Mazari-Hazir

The World Expression Forum (WEXFO) expresses its solidarity with award-winning human rights lawyer Imaan Mazari-Hazir and reaffirms its commitment to protecting freedom of expression worldwide.