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Reviewer鈥檚 verdict: no free speech crisis on Australian campuses

But union says codifying free speech principles would backfire

Published on
March 25, 2019
Last updated
March 26, 2019
Kids shout through megaphones at the Opera House during the Sydney Festival. Australia
Source: Getty

Claims of a free speech crisis at Australian universities are set to be rejected by the eminent judge charged with reviewing open expression on the nation鈥檚 campuses, 糖心Vlog can reveal.

The government-appointed reviewer, former High Court chief justice Robert French, is instead expected to conclude that a hotchpotch of policies and principles around academic freedom is fuelling perceptions that free speech is under threat.

Mr French is not expected to support any wide-scale attempt to regulate free speech or wind back institutional autonomy, and instead appears likely to recommend only minor tweaks to legislation and regulations, such as inserting a definition of academic freedom in the 糖心Vlog Support Act.

And, as he flagged when he accepted the appointment last November, Mr French is developing a 鈥渕odel code鈥 to help guide universities鈥 rules on free expression.

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罢贬贰听understands that a draft of the code was circulated among universities and academic representative bodies in February, with feedback due by early March. While聽THE聽has not seen the draft, the response to it from the National Tertiary Education Union 鈥 which has been posted online 鈥 offers clues to its contents.

In the response, union president Alison Barnes questions the advisability of a model code.

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鈥淲hile we accept that it is not your intention to create a statutory foundation for a more intrusive regulatory environment, we are concerned that others may not share your view,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f and when such a code is published, the temptation will be to mandate it either in legislation or in standards.鈥

The submission warns that a code could perpetuate the 鈥渃onfusion and misinterpretation鈥 of current university policies. It cites a clause in the draft code聽that would allow universities to bar external speakers whose ideas 鈥渄o not meet scholarly standards to such an extent as to be detrimental to the university鈥檚 character鈥.

Such a principle would inevitably encourage accusations that speakers were being excluded on the grounds of 鈥渋deological bias鈥, the submission argues. 鈥淎ny attempt to codify a set of principles鈥ill soon be used and interpreted as rules and challenged either administratively or legally,鈥 Dr Barnes says.

The union instead advocates 鈥渁 minimalist approach鈥, saying that codifying an 鈥渆nigmatic鈥 concept such as academic freedom would constrain its application. 鈥淭he unintended consequence鈥ill be to limit rather than liberate academic freedom and free speech,鈥 the submission says.

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The submission blames the mishmash of university policies partly on a tendency to treat free speech and academic freedom, two distinct concepts, as one and the same. It says that the NTEU is partly responsible for this聽because its lobbying to enshrine academic freedom in legislation led to the adoption of the 鈥渃ompromise鈥 term of 鈥渇ree intellectual inquiry鈥.

This term 鈥渦nnecessarily conflates academic freedom and free speech, which is unhelpful in the current debates鈥, the union says.

Mr French declined a request for interview. The Education Department said that any decision to publicly release his report or submissions to his review would be 鈥渁 matter for government鈥.

Universities had questioned the need for the review, pointing out that they had issued a collective statement reaffirming their commitment to free expression the week before Mr French was appointed by education minister Dan Tehan.

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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