French academics fear being targeted by politicians from across the political spectrum in the run-up to the 2022 presidential election after the country鈥檚 education minister accused universities of creating an intellectual breeding ground for Islamic terrorism.
Following the beheading in mid-October of a teacher who showed pupils cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, researchers who focus on areas such as racism, Islamophobia and French colonialism have come in for unprecedented attack from parts of Emmanuel Macron鈥檚 government 鈥 which was initially seen as a bastion against right-wing populism 鈥 and from fellow academics.
鈥淟inking all this to terrorism is what鈥檚 new,鈥 said Simon Dawes, a media lecturer at the Universit茅 de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines.
Academics were now accused of having 鈥渂lood on your hands鈥 for conducting certain types of research, argued Dr Dawes, who has warned that academic freedom of speech could be under threat.
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In the aftermath of Samuel Paty鈥檚 murder, Jean-Michel Blanquer, the education minister, claimed that 鈥渓eft-wing Islamism鈥 was 鈥渨reaking havoc鈥 in French universities.
Doubling down on these comments, he later said it was necessary to 鈥渇ight鈥 intellectual currents coming from US聽universities that viewed society through the lens of ethnic origin, religion or gender 鈥 rather than the French republican ideal of equality 鈥 because they risked the 鈥渇ragmentation鈥 of society and created a 鈥渧ision of the world which converges with the interests of the Islamists鈥.
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France鈥檚 Conference of University Presidents (CPU) was forced to hit back, denying that universities were complicit in聽terrorism.
Since then, 100 academics have publicly backed Mr Blanquer鈥檚 comments, accusing 鈥渞acialist鈥 and post-colonial scholars of 鈥渇eeding an anti-white racism and a聽hatred of聽France鈥.
In some ways, this debate mirrors developments in the US and the UK, where some right-wingers worry that certain academic standpoints are unfairly whipping up resentment against state and country. In recent months, both Donald Trump, the outgoing US president, and a minister in Britain鈥檚 Conservative government have attacked critical race theory, a framework in the social sciences that examines racism embedded in the law and legal institutions.
In France, however, academics exploring such areas are assailed from several sides 鈥 by the far right and also by staunch republican secularists in Mr聽Macron鈥檚 government and academia. Current polling points to a run-off between Mr聽Macron and a representative of the far-right National Rally come the presidential election in April聽2022.
鈥淔or the French centrist government to be adding its voice is dangerous,鈥 said Dr Dawes.
The furore came close to leading to real聽changes in the law. France鈥檚 Senate initially amended a new research law to state that academic freedom must be exercised 鈥渋n聽respect of the values of the republic鈥, a change that prompted the CPU to demand the law be clarified and rewritten. It was only toned down by the Senate at the last moment.聽
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This amendment would have been 鈥渧ery bad鈥 for autonomy of thought in universities, said Rose-Marie Lagrave, director of studies at the Paris-based School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS). Dr聽Dawes said the amendment would have left him unclear whether he could raise criticisms of French republican values, such as secularism, in his teaching.
One of the academics backing the minister is Nathalie Heinich, research director for sociology at the EHESS. The issue was not that universities studied areas such as racism and French colonialism, which was as it should be, she said. Instead, the problem was 鈥渁ctivist鈥 academics who used research to create 鈥渁聽victim mentality鈥 among minorities in聽France.
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鈥淭he problem is now in French universities there has been a fashionable importation of American identity politics,鈥 she said. Claims by academics of 鈥渟ystematic racism鈥 and 鈥渟tate racism鈥 were 鈥渁聽direct encouragement to聽terrorism鈥, she told 糖心Vlog.
Still, there is no evidence of any link between universities and Mr聽Paty鈥檚 killer, the 18-year-old Abdullakh Anzorov, a Russian of Chechen origin who moved to France as a child refugee, nor the Tunisian man who stabbed three people in Nice later in October.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think if you take someone who鈥檚 beheaded someone, they鈥檙e avid readers of Judith Butler,鈥 remarked Dr Dawes, referring to the pioneering American gender theorist.
There are fears that the escalating rhetoric has already created a more hostile environment for French scholars. Dr聽Dawes pointed to the cancellation in early November of an academic colloquium on feminism after online harassment by far-right trolls.
One of the organisers of the event, Sylvie Chaperon, a history professor at the University of Toulouse-Jean Jaur猫s, said that while it was hard to link the harassment directly to the minister鈥檚 comments, universities had been weakened by聽them.
鈥淭hey undermine our credibility and fuel hostility towards us,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e need support and commitment and not unfounded criticism.鈥
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However, there are splits in the French government over whether to accuse universities of laying the intellectual groundwork for terrorism. Fr茅d茅rique Vidal, the higher education minister, has not echoed Mr聽Blanquer鈥檚 rhetoric, tweeting instead that universities are 鈥渘ot聽places of聽radicalisation鈥 and that 鈥渕ore than ever鈥 research was needed to understand the origins of Islamic radicalism.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Scholars fear for freedom amid Islamic聽terrorism row
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