Though most attacks on higher education communities occur in authoritarian countries, Western scholars would do well to look also at what is happening closer to home.
Free to Think 2021,听听of the Scholars at Risk (SAR) Academic Freedom Monitoring Project, lists 332 such attacks in 65 countries. These include 110 cases of 鈥渒illings, violence [and] disappearance鈥 and 101 cases of wrongful imprisonment, along with prosecution, 鈥渓oss of position鈥 and 鈥渢ravel restrictions鈥, even though such documented examples constitute only 鈥渁 fraction of attacks on higher education that have occurred over the past year鈥.
It is probably unsurprising that countries such as Afghanistan, Brazil, China, Myanmar, Turkey and Zimbabwe are well represented, but the report also flags up cases of intimidation and harassment in places far less well known for human rights abuses.
The office of Andrea Boudouvis, rector of the National Technical University of Athens, was vandalised by 鈥渁 group of 鈥榟ooded鈥 individuals with hammers, crowbars, and paint鈥 protesting against 鈥渁 plan to renovate a historic building on campus 鈥 one that had been used as an open meeting space for students and Athenians 鈥 into a research and conference centre鈥. In France, 鈥渁ntisemitic and misogynistic images and messaging were used to hijack a virtual conference on feminist movements hosted by the University of Toulouse-Jean Jaur猫s鈥. In the Netherlands, meanwhile, two scholars reported being intimidated by 鈥渁 right-wing online activist group鈥ommitted to breaking up the 鈥榣eft hegemony鈥 by exposing 鈥榣eftist鈥 members of society and 鈥榤apping left-wing networks鈥欌.
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Perhaps even more striking, the report, published on 9 December, includes 12 examples of 鈥渁ttacks on higher education communities鈥澨齮hat听took place in the US between 1 September 2020 and 31 August 2021.
in Idaho, for example, 鈥渁 law was passed that explicitly identified critical race theory as a threat to fundamental rights such as freedom of inquiry and expression, and respect for the dignity of others鈥. Legislation proposed in Louisiana, New Hampshire and Rhode Island went even further to 鈥渂an the teaching of 鈥榙ivisive concepts鈥, such as the idea that systemic racism exists鈥. SAR, therefore, felt the need to 鈥渃all on US lawmakers and other political actors to refrain from efforts to dictate the content of teaching or research, including through legislative, executive, or private actions鈥.
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Free to Think听2021听also describes instances of unfair treatment that individual academics in the US, as in so many other countries, have faced.
A tenured professor at Linfield University in Oregon was 鈥渟ummarily terminated after he publicly advocated on behalf of students and faculty who complained about alleged sexual abuse by members of the university鈥檚 board of trustees鈥. A professor at Collin College in Texas was also fired 鈥渋n apparent retaliation for expression critical of the college鈥檚 Covid-19 response鈥.
After setting out this catalogue of abuses, SAR offers a range of recommendations to 鈥渟tates, higher education communities, and civil society鈥. At their heart, however, is unflinching 鈥渟upport for the principles that critical discourse is not disloyalty, that ideas are not crimes, and that everyone must be free to think, question, and share their ideas鈥, whether across the globe or in the next street.
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