{"id":1120974,"date":"2024-01-12T14:09:11","date_gmt":"2024-01-12T19:09:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/uncategorized\/opinion-campus-culture-wars-are-a-teachable-moment-in-how-freedom-of-speech-and-academic-freedom-differ-the-globe-and-mail\/"},"modified":"2024-01-12T14:09:11","modified_gmt":"2024-01-12T19:09:11","slug":"opinion-campus-culture-wars-are-a-teachable-moment-in-how-freedom-of-speech-and-academic-freedom-differ-the-globe-and-mail","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/free-speech\/opinion-campus-culture-wars-are-a-teachable-moment-in-how-freedom-of-speech-and-academic-freedom-differ-the-globe-and-mail\/","title":{"rendered":"Opinion: Campus culture wars are a teachable moment in how freedom of speech and academic freedom differ &#8211; The Globe and Mail"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>Open this photo in    gallery:                            <\/p>\n<p>            A protester in            convocation garb and a keffiyeh scarf attends a Nov. 20            protest at Columbia University, where students, alumni            and supporters criticized the school for banning the            groups Justice in Palestine and Jewish Voice for            Peace.Michael M.            Santiago\/Getty Images          <\/p>\n<p>    Jacob T. Levy is the chair of the department of political    science and Tomlinson Professor of Political Theory at McGill    University.  <\/p>\n<p>    Across the United States and Canada, universities are    struggling to navigate the politics of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack    on Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza. Here in Montreal,    campus politics reached its ugliest point about a month into    the conflict, with     violence between opposing groups of student protesters at    Concordia, and the extraordinary     suspension of a University of Montreal lecturer who was    involved in the Concordia episode. Since then, things have been    quieter here but not everywhere. Six Canadian universities        are being sued for allegedly failing to protect Jewish    students from a hostile antisemitic environment. Demands to    suppress the speech of pro-Palestinian student protesters have    reached as high as the U.S. Congress, and have cost two elite    university presidents their jobs.  <\/p>\n<p>    Particularly in the U.S., the complexity of the current moment    has been aggravated by the demonization of higher education in    the highly polarized culture wars of the past decade. But even    without that external political environment, the very acute    disagreements about Israel and Palestine highlight how little    shared understanding there is between different university    constituencies, and between universities and the general    public, about how to handle heated debate on campus.  <\/p>\n<p>    This is partly because the principles governing university life    are in some ways strange and counterintuitive, so theyre    complicated to defend and tempting to abandon. Its also partly    because educators havent put in the work defending them. Many    institutions of higher education have let some of the resources    and credibility they need in a moment like this slip away, and    this crisis should spur them to rebuild those resources and    credibility before the next one inevitably arrives.  <\/p>\n<p>    The highest-profile development in the post-Oct. 7 academic    troubles was the Dec. 5 U.S. House of Representatives committee    hearing grilling the leaders of Harvard,    MIT and the University of Pennsylvania, and the subsequent    resignation of two of them, Harvards Claudine Gay and Penns    Elizabeth Magill. While there were idiosyncrasies about both    cases  Dr. Magill     had been under fire about perceived campus antisemitism    before Oct. 7, and in the end Dr. Gay was brought down by    allegations of plagiarism  the core problem at those    universities was much the same as it has been elsewhere.  <\/p>\n<p>            Harvard's            then-president Claudine Gay testifies on Capitol Hill            on Dec. 5 alongside her University of Pennsylvania            counterpart, Liz Magill. Both would resign weeks            later.Mark            Schiefelbein\/The Associated Press          <\/p>\n<p>    Opinion about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is, of course,    highly polarized to begin with. Undergraduate activists on any    issue are often prone to immoderation. And North American    universities include a diverse mix of Jewish, Muslim and Arab    students (and faculty and staff), including many who are    themselves from Israel or the Palestinian Territories, or who    have family connections there. And so the Hamas terrorist    attacks on Israeli civilians prompted two immediate responses.    One was a combination of mourning and fear on the part of Jews,    including Israelis and those with family ties to Israel. And    one was an activist mobilization in support of Palestinian    rights, a mobilization that included some early endorsements of    armed resistance to Israel that were ignorant of the actual    scale of the attacks, some that werent, and some pre-emptive    attention to the violent Israeli response that was sure to    follow. Jewish members of university communities were outraged    and frightened, and appealed to university leaders to denounce    the attacks and denounce, if not suppress, the pro-Palestinian    protest speech. Different universities answered these appeals    differently, but at many, the responses were deemed    insufficient by Jewish students and alumni. As the Israeli    counterattack unfolded, expanded and persisted, counterappeals    were made: If the university took a stand against the Hamas    attacks, why would it not also take a stand against the    devastation Israel was unleashing on Gaza? These werent the    only questions that divided campuses, but they were the ones    that prompted the congressional hearings on whether the    protesters speech  tendentiously characterized as advocating    the genocide of Jews  was being sufficiently restricted.  <\/p>\n<p>    There have been a lot of sources of confusion in the debate    about all this. One is that universities offer very robust    protection for political and protest speech, but as an    incidental byproduct, not in the same deliberate way that a    liberal democratic society does. A universitys core commitment    is to the discovery, transmission and preservation of knowledge     paradigmatically, what is done in research, in teaching, and    in publication and library collection.     The principle that defends that commitment is not freedom    of speech as such, but rather     academic freedom.  <\/p>\n<p>            A member of the Jewish            Student Union of Germany speaks at a silent protest in            Berlin on Dec. 15, in response to a pro-Palestinian            group's occupation of a university lecture            hall.Annegret            Hilse\/Reuters          <\/p>\n<p>    Academic freedom has a few moving parts:  <\/p>\n<p>    First, the freedom to follow arguments and evidence where they    lead, according to scholarly methods. The researcher, or for    that matter the student writing a paper for a class, is free to    reach unpopular conclusions and to overturn established ideas,    provided that they can support and defend those conclusions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Second, the freedom to teach, within the confines of the    scholarly mission of the class, and limited by the freedom of    students to be secure that they will be assessed fairly. These    limits mean that professors need to stick to the subject as    that is defined by their scholarly community or discipline;    when assigned to teach astronomy, they cant teach astrology.    They also mean that the front of the classroom isnt a pulpit    or a political platform. But within those constraints,    professors have substantial freedom to choose their pedagogical    approach, their course materials, which ideas to emphasize,    which skills to teach and so on.  <\/p>\n<p>    And finally, freedom from evaluation on non-academic grounds,    of which the traditionally most important are political and    religious grounds. Members of the academic community are only    to be academically evaluated, for purposes ranging from student    grades to professors tenure, on the grounds of the success of    their academic work. They may not lose academic standing    (student enrolment, faculty employment and so on) for their    views and speech on other questions. In the early 20th-century    cases that helped shape this rule, universities came to the    understanding that, say, an economist couldnt be fired for    being an atheist, a mathematician for being a socialist; what    they had to say on those political and religious questions was    irrelevant to their work. The technical phrase here is freedom    of extramural speech  outside the walls of the    laboratory, the classroom and the library. Protections of    extramural speech are very strong, not primarily in order to    protect that speech, but in order to protect the academic    integrity of what goes on inside the laboratory,    classroom and library.  <\/p>\n<p>    A rule that has traditionally accompanied and strengthened    academic freedom is institutional neutrality. If    academic freedom is the ability of scholars and scholarly    communities or disciplines to work without having an orthodoxy    imposed on them, institutional neutrality is the commitment not    to declare an orthodoxy in the first place. Just like a    professor at the front of a classroom shouldnt use it as a    pulpit to announce their own political and religious views, so    too should the university as a whole not adopt substantive    political or religious opinions that would chill the freedom of    its members to pursue their own ideas and arguments. A great    deal of important political inquiry and debate happens at a    university, but its undertaken by students and professors with    differing views pursuing differing arguments, not by the    institution as a whole declaring official conclusions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Universities sometimes need to speak up in favour of their own    institutional interests or the general needs of higher    education. A few university decisions unavoidably require    substantive moral judgments about political figures: whose    contributions are worth honouring with an honorary degree,    whose career involved so much injustice that their name should    be stripped from buildings. But when theres not that kind of    necessary connection to university business, the institution    should stay silent and neutral, to guarantee the freedom of    students and professors to inquire, criticize and debate.  <\/p>\n<p>            Faculty, staff and            students at York University in Toronto walk out on Nov.            28 to support academics arrested for allegedly            vandalizing an Indigo store.Chris Young\/The Canadian            Press          <\/p>\n<p>    These principles generate some surprising and strange outcomes.    For example, the odd thing about the centrality of student    protests to important moments in university life is that they    are so irrelevant to the universitys mission. There is    very strong protection for the freedom of protest, not because    protest is important to a university the way it is to a    democratic society, but because its academically irrelevant.    Its wrong to question a students (or professors) standing in    the academic community because of what they say at a protest     or on social media, or in any other non-academic setting. The    only appropriate limits are not about the content of whats    said, but about the conduct of the protest action; the    university has to protect not only the safety of its other    members but also the security of its academic functions. It    cant rule against the language on a sign, but it must    intervene to prevent violence between students, or occupations    and blockades that would prevent a class from meeting, or an    invited speaker from speaking.  <\/p>\n<p>    This is easier said than done. Universities have very good    reason to avoid deploying the force of campus security officers    or regular police against students, even when those students    threaten core campus activities and thus the rights of other    students. Escalation, overreach and the chilling of legitimate    protest are all constant dangers; and the whole student body,    including the protesters, is part of the academic community.    Police helicopters and billy clubs on campus are always a sign    of failure. But waiting until a wrongful protest ends    peacefully and then taking action against the protesters    requires knowing their identities, and it doesnt take much of    a face covering to make that difficult. So universities have    often ended up shrugging off such protests, with occasional    unpredictable bursts of punitive seriousness. These are genuine    problems that dont lend themselves to straightforward    solutions, but many universities have probably erred too far in    the direction of the shrug, letting the belief grow that    classes may be disrupted or speakers blockaded without    consequence.  <\/p>\n<p>            Swiss police scuffle            with anti-war protesters at the University of Lausanne            on Nov. 16, where the French and Swiss presidents were            visiting campus.Cyril Zingaro\/Keystone via            AP          <\/p>\n<p>    The freedom-through-indifference that is the universitys    correct stance toward protests doesnt, however, satisfy    the protesters. When you bring together lots of energetic young    adults at the life stage when theyre most politically    idealistic and least weighed down by competing    responsibilities, when you put them in an environment of    intellectual ferment, you get activism. Sometimes this has made    student activist movements important parts of social and    political change or reform. More often the activism is    experienced by those who take part in it as morally critical    and personally transformative. And when thinking about the    issues that inspire their hopes or their anger, they often want    more from the university than indifference. They want    affirmation: for the institution to announce its commitment to    the cause, to devote educational resources to it, to reallocate    its endowment or spending in support of it, to suppress the    speech of those who oppose it.  <\/p>\n<p>    It can be hard for institutions to resist, particularly when    faculty and administrators are broadly sympathetic to the same    cause as the students. So they let institutional neutrality    slip, making declarations and symbolic statements affirming    that the university is on the side of all good things when its    not the job of a university to be on a side at all. An    increasing habit of this in the past decade      pronouncements on non-university political questions from    abortion to police violence to the Russia-Ukraine war     left a disaster waiting to happen.  <\/p>\n<p>    Happen it did, in the autumn of 2023 when the members of    university communities conspicuously did not all    sympathize with the same cause. When faced with demands to    denounce Hamas, or student activists who endorsed Palestinian    armed resistance, or Israel, or Zionist speech on campus, or    whatever, universities often fell back on the rule of    institutional neutrality. But critics found it hard to take    that rule seriously any more because, they said, the    institution had shown that it didnt take it seriously either.    By the same token, the rule that the university shouldnt take    any interest in the rhetoric thats used in a protest or on    social media was harder to take seriously in an era of    hate-speech rules, restrictions on exclusionary speech, and a    discourse around safety that treated hostile language as    violence. And so many universities found themselves accused of    doing too little to criticize Hamas or to denounce and restrict    pro-Palestinian speech by critics who noted that denouncing bad    things and restricting hateful or unsafe speech seemed to be    very much part of the institutional tool kit these days.  <\/p>\n<p>            A truck with protest            banners drives around the Harvard campus on Dec. 12,            linking the debate over the Israel-Hamas war with            conservative grievances about pronoun            policies.JOSEPH            PREZIOSO\/AFP via Getty Images          <\/p>\n<p>    These were problems of universities own making. But they    coincided with problems that were very much not. What we have    seen since Oct. 7 is in part the culmination of almost a decade    of attacks on higher education by the ascendant    populist-authoritarian wing of conservative politics. Starting    in about 2015, conservative politicians, media figures and    activists began a sustained campaign against perceived leftward    movements at universities, particularly on race, gender and    gender identity.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the U.S., a steady drumbeat of stories in the conservative    press about campus identity politics drove a dramatic    divergence in public confidence in higher education. In 2015, a    majority of Republicans thought higher education had a    beneficial effect on American society, by a 17-point    margin.    Two years later, they thought the reverse, by 22 points.    (Democratic views were basically stable in the same period.)    Conservative advocacy groups created watchlists of    left-wing professors and encouraged students to report on them    or secretly record them. Formerly staid campus conservative    groups radicalized and began inviting provocateurs such as        Milo Yiannopoulos to speak, seeking more and more attention    by provoking protests and sometimes     cancellations.  <\/p>\n<p>    At first, these critics of higher education focused on the idea    that free speech and academic freedom were coming under threat:    Visiting speakers were being silenced and conservative students    were censoring themselves in a climate of left-wing    intolerance. That emphasis has since faded away, in favour of    an open willingness to suppress teaching, research and speech    about race and gender that conservatives dislike. The centre of    gravity has shifted from individual celebrity provocateurs to    conservative governments that really do have the power to    cancel.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 2017, Hungarys authoritarian conservative government        launched an eventually successful campaign to drive the    privately funded and Western-oriented Central European    University out of the country and     to prohibit the discipline of gender studies. Starting in    2021, Republican state politicians across the United States    began advocating heavy-handed interference in teaching and    research about (especially) race and (to a lesser extent)    gender, with many bills banning the teaching of what was    inaccurately called critical race theory. The conservative    activist Chris Rufo, who recently led the charge to push    Harvards president out of office on plagiarism charges, was a    prime culprit in mischaracterizing teaching and research about    systems of racial privilege and disadvantage as critical race    theory, and making its prohibition a cause clbre. He found    an active ally in Floridas Republican Governor and then-future    presidential candidate Ron DeSantis, who pushed through    restrictions on speech, texts, teaching and research about    race, gender and sexual orientation that reached from primary    school to Floridas huge system of public universities. When    Mr. DeSantis decided to remake Floridas elite liberal    arts-oriented New College as a model of anti-wokeism,    abolishing its gender-studies department and filling its    student body with recruited athletes for newly established    sports teams, he     appointed Mr. Rufo as one of the colleges new trustees.  <\/p>\n<p>            Protesters at New            College in Sarasota, Fla., dress as Handmaid's Tale            characters at a rally last February against the state            government's education policies.Octavio Jones\/Reuters          <\/p>\n<p>    The moves to restrict higher education in Florida have been    especially prominent, but Republican politicians and    politically appointed trustees in states including Texas, North Carolina, Virginia and Louisiana, among others, have likewise    shifted to direct interference in university curriculums and    hiring decisions on political grounds. Up until Oct. 7, the    emphasis had been overwhelmingly on gender studies and (again,    wrongly called) critical race theory. The conflict in the    Middle East shook up the political dynamics and expanded the    conflict from public universities in Republican states to all    of North American higher education. Elite liberal universities    arent openly divided about the legitimacy of studying race or    gender, but the Arab-Israeli conflict splits apart    constituencies everywhere. Genuine intra-campus conflicts of    values and misunderstandings of principle created a    vulnerability that hostile off-campus actors have been happy to    exploit.  <\/p>\n<p>    The events of the past few months have driven home how little    the right-wing critique of universities was ever actually about    freedom of speech or academic freedom. The downfall of two    university presidents partly for their failure to censor    student speech and their refusal to say that more such speech    should be punished just makes it undeniable. But Jewish and    pro-Israel members of university communities arent necessarily    guilty of the same hypocrisy. Theyve seen universities    themselves shift away from the principles of academic freedom,    freedom of non-academic speech, and institutional neutrality,    often in the name of protecting vulnerable populations, and, in    the wake of the murders of Oct. 7, asked whether Israeli Jews    are somehow outside the category of the vulnerable. Many    institutions of higher education have gotten in the habit of    making pronouncements on political issues that tried to be    substantive and anodyne at the same time; of letting some    speech restrictions creep in on speech that surely everyone can    agree is bad; of regulating the content of particularly vicious    political messages but tolerating protests that blockade    academic activities. These are generalizations that dont apply    to all colleges and universities, indeed probably not most; but    enough to weaken the credibility of the core principles.  <\/p>\n<p>    The best time to have started to do the right thing was    yesterday, but the second-best time is today. University    leadership cant wish away the off-campus attacks, but they can    recommit to academic freedom, freedom of extramural speech, and    institutional neutrality, starting now. That will mean, for    example, a firm defence of the right of pro-Palestinian    students to protest non-disruptively; a clear stand against    professors using their classrooms as political platforms; a    refusal to adjudicate and police the meaning and intent of    extramural political slogans or social-media posts; and the    discipline to avoid adopting institutional political platforms    on foreign, political or social policy. With those rules in    place, they can provide the site and space for students and    faculty alike to study, explore, discuss and debate, to    celebrate, mourn and protest, even the most divisive questions    in political life.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Read the original here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theglobeandmail.com\/opinion\/article-campus-culture-wars-are-a-teachable-moment-in-how-freedom-of-speech\/\" title=\"Opinion: Campus culture wars are a teachable moment in how freedom of speech and academic freedom differ - The Globe and Mail\" rel=\"noopener\">Opinion: Campus culture wars are a teachable moment in how freedom of speech and academic freedom differ - The Globe and Mail<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Open this photo in gallery: A protester in convocation garb and a keffiyeh scarf attends a Nov.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/free-speech\/opinion-campus-culture-wars-are-a-teachable-moment-in-how-freedom-of-speech-and-academic-freedom-differ-the-globe-and-mail\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[162384],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1120974","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-free-speech"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1120974"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1120974"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1120974\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1120974"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1120974"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1120974"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}