Adopting non-attribution rules for conversations in聽classrooms could allow lecturers and students to聽speak more freely amid a聽鈥渃hilling effect鈥 on聽campus discussions, according to US聽scholars.
The Chatham House Rule 鈥 which allows participants to聽share information from a聽conversation only if聽they do聽not ascribe the remarks to a聽particular speaker 鈥 has been adopted most widely to聽date at聽the newly opened University of Austin, which presents itself as a聽bastion of聽free speech compared with traditional institutions.
Similar measures are already in place at Harvard University in the Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School. A working group at the institution recently suggested that the rule should be applied more widely.
The principle is used by the University of Chicago鈥檚 Forum for Free Inquiry and Expression, according to its director, Tom聽Ginsburg.
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鈥淭he general phenomenon of people being unwilling to take risks because of social media is absolutely well documented, and there鈥檚 just a ton of self-censorship out there,鈥 said the professor of international law and political science.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have any hard data on how much this has affected the classroom, but a聽lot of faculty, informally, will tell you that they think discussions are聽not as vigorous as they used to聽be.鈥
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A survey of more than 6,000 US academics published last week by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression found that 87聽per cent of respondents reported difficulties in聽having an聽open and honest conversation about at聽least one hot-button political topic.
Professor Ginsburg said those who valued the robust exchange of ideas should welcome any experiment to encourage more honest debates, particularly at a time when many academics were 鈥渁fraid of the students鈥.
鈥淐hatham might expand freedom in the classroom if professors aren鈥檛 worried about being quoted out of context or recorded and put out on social media,鈥 he said.
鈥淏ut I think the primary benefit and the focus should be on the students, because those are the people that we really need to get speaking.鈥
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The Chatham House Rule could encourage students to view the classroom as a 鈥渟acred space鈥 in which they can try out ideas and do聽not have to be held responsible for them in perpetuity, Professor Ginsburg added. However, he warned that enforcement would be聽tricky.
Steven McGuire, the Paul and Karen Levy fellow in campus freedom at the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, said the Chatham House Rule could act as a 鈥済uard rail鈥 to protect against students being ostracised for something they reportedly said in聽class.
鈥淭he university classroom should be a place of exploration and experimentation 鈥 somewhere students can feel free to express their views, try out new arguments, and even play devil鈥檚 advocate without fear that they will be personally attacked or cancelled for what they say,鈥 Dr聽McGuire said.
Hank Reichman, professor emeritus of history at California State University, East Bay and former vice-president of the American Association of University Professors,聽pointed out that as long ago as 1915 the AAUP had聽noted that classroom discussions 鈥渙ught not to be supposed to be utterances for the public at large鈥; it would be 鈥渉am-fisted鈥 to enforce this with the Chatham House Rule, he added.
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鈥淲hether the Chatham House Rule is the best way of dealing with the problem is questionable, to be sure. But given the dangers of surreptitious recording, of doxing鈥聽think the principle is more important than ever, as much if not more for students as for faculty,鈥 he said.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: House rules: a way to聽end US鈥 big chill?
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