糖心Vlog

Australia鈥檚 security straitjacket causes consternation

Australian universities face more restrictions on their foreign collaboration, no matter who wins the coming election

Published on
April 10, 2022
Last updated
April 11, 2022
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Source: istock

Australian universities face an increasingly restrictive operating environment regardless of the outcome of next month鈥檚 federal election, after an influential parliamentary committee called for more constraints on the sector.

While national security issues are expected to feature heavily in the 21 May election, with campaign posters already portraying a vote for the Labor opposition as a vote for the Chinese Communist Party, the clampdown on universities appears bipartisan.

The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) offered 27 recommendations to curtail foreign influence through talent recruitment programmes, Confucius Institutes and 鈥渙n-campus intimidation鈥, including auditing a decade of research grants for evidence of conflicts of interest.

The PJCIS is drawn almost equally from the two major parties, with six Liberal members and five from Labor. Its long-awaited report, due last July, was one of four tabled by the committee on a Friday afternoon four days before the federal budget.

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chief executive Vicki Thomson said the release of the 鈥渦nanimous and bipartisan鈥 report ahead of an expected election announcement suggested that national security policies affecting Australian universities would be much the same, irrespective of which party formed government.

鈥淭he PJCIS is the most powerful committee of the Australian parliament,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ther countries, like the UK and Canada, are looking very closely at [the report] as a signal for what might be coming their way.鈥

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Sources say the PJCIS report was all but finished last June, and some recommendations 鈥 like the proposal for an 鈥渁ccountable authority鈥 to look after each university鈥檚 foreign interference matters 鈥 were implemented long ago. Yet errors in the report, such as the repeated misnaming of the education department, suggest it was produced hurriedly.

The government鈥檚 security interventions have already drawn criticism for lacking clarity and imposing excessive reporting burdens. The PJCIS recommendations would push Australia further down this path, increasing government oversight in areas where evidence of problems is questionable.

For example, universities would be obliged to report instances of overseas-induced 鈥渉arassment, intimidation and censorship鈥 every year. Sceptics say the few documented cases to date are regularly rehashed to create an inflated impression of foreign meddling.

But others say intimidation on campus is commonplace but rarely reported. 鈥淐lear policies鈥o counter state-backed harassment and intimidation and the resulting self-censorship are long overdue,鈥 said Human Rights Watch researcher Sophie McNeill.

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Ms Thomson cautioned against 鈥渄uplicating effort鈥, citing the committee鈥檚 recommendation to establish a National Research Integrity Office within the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (Teqsa). This risked replicating work already done by the Australian Research Integrity Committee (Aric), which reviews institutional processes to ensure that research is conducted responsibly.聽

Ms Thomson said there was 鈥減otentially an argument鈥 for extending Aric鈥檚 mandate to cover national security issues, but 鈥渟hifting it into Teqsa changes everything because Teqsa鈥檚 about regulation. It鈥檚 an agency with the task of ensuring quality and compliance with regulations. If you鈥檙e replacing a guideline approach with a regulatory approach, we would need to understand what that means in practice.鈥

The PJCIS also wants universities to 鈥渆xercise greater caution鈥 when they conduct research in 63 鈥渃ritical technology鈥 fields listed by the federal government last November. The sector should not consider the list 鈥渆xhaustive鈥, the report adds.

Four of the report鈥檚 recommendations relate to foreign recruitment schemes聽such as China鈥檚 Thousand Talents Plan, despite testimony from the head of security agency Asio that the programme is 鈥渋n and of itself not concerning鈥. One recommendation would deny universities accreditation, a precondition for significant defence-related research, if they have 鈥渆xposure鈥 to talent recruitment schemes.

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Critics say such restrictions are unnecessary, given that no university has been found in breach of the Defence Trade Controls Act. A source said the committee had an 鈥渋f you don鈥檛 find anything, just keep looking鈥 approach. 鈥淧JCIS won鈥檛 leave this alone even if there is a change of government,鈥 he said.

Others say current regulations are inadequate to deal with contemporary threats. The Defence Trade Controls Act, for example, was designed before major concerns emerged about intellectual property theft.

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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