In the marketplace of ideas 鈥 unlike those of uranium or sarin 鈥 I rarely endorse boycotts.
To be sure, was naive to expect that the free play of ideas would lead us ever closer to truth and reason: for all their free speech, more than half of believe that the Devil exists. But if we鈥檙e aiming to promote critical thought, shutting down speech is not the answer.
Given my belief in free speech, it will come as no surprise that I often attend conferences about it. An event in Hungary planned for later this spring, however, has caught me off guard.
It was planned a year ago at a university linked to the Fidesz Party led by Viktor Orb谩n, the prime minister. Despite the Fidesz government鈥檚 steady destruction of academic freedom and independent media in Hungary, I had been perfectly willing to attend. Our conference was to run only in small, closed sessions 鈥 not for political reasons but merely to allow participants to discuss their research informally 鈥 and would therefore have little broader impact.
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But then the Hungarian Parliament rammed through a bill to drive the US-accredited Central European University out of the country. That鈥檚 when I started to waver.
Our host university isn鈥檛 officially run by the state, but rather by the Catholic Church. In the West, of course, many universities started life as religious establishments. Their core academic missions mostly became secular and pluralist long ago. But no such assumption can be made in Eastern Europe, where the dominant churches 鈥 notably Catholic (Hungary, Poland, Croatia) and Orthodox (Russia, Romania, Serbia) 鈥 have frequently supported anti-liberal parties.
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In most Western universities, you鈥檒l search high and low to find academics speaking out in favour of the government of the day. At the university to which we鈥檝e been beckoned, by contrast, I鈥檓 struggling to find lecturers who speak out against Fidesz. One of the conference participants 鈥 I repeat, this is a conference about free speech 鈥 has for many years served on the Hungarian government body overseeing the media crackdown. Surely democracy means nothing if not the possibility of holding such state agents to account. Does that principle vanish when they remove their state uniforms to don the robes of academia? Or would directly criticising such individuals smack too much of comfortable Westerners wagging fingers at a colleague who ought to be treated as an equal member of the group?
Simple lines between good and evil are hard to draw in Eastern Europe. Under communism, it was by no means a small handful of demons who collaborated with authorities. Informers included ordinary people as well as figures of high cultural standing 鈥 artists, film-makers and certainly academics.
Nor was there a single communist ideology. The official line, of course, was that Marxism-Leninism supplied the ultimate worldview, having 鈥渟urpassed鈥 liberal democracy. But there was also a 鈥 superficially 鈥 more conciliatory narrative holding that liberal democracy was perfectly valid for the West, while communism was equally valid elsewhere. That approach became the only utterable worldview at the United Nations, where, even today, you鈥檇 better check your company before suggesting that democracy may be the best political system.
During the Cold War, this live-and-let-live philosophy also became de rigueur in Western academia. After all, doesn鈥檛 an age-old liberal tradition exhort tolerance of difference, openness to diversity and mutual respect? Of course, Western intellectuals were perfectly welcome to criticise communism, but only if they hastened to pile on the obligatory 鈥渢he West is just as bad鈥 apologetics.
The official state communism died with the fall of the Berlin Wall, but that pseudo-pluralism did not. When Vladimir Putin praises 鈥渟overeign democracy鈥 and Orb谩n cheerleads for 鈥渋lliberal democracy鈥, they by no means seek to impose those ideas on the rest of us. They鈥檙e more than happy for us to keep our values as long as we let them keep theirs.
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Soviet bloc social scientists used to sweat bullets when befriending Western colleagues. Today, they are heartily encouraged to study in the West. They forge links with Western scholars and heap admiration on Western intellectuals 鈥 while the grip tightens on the democrats at home. Question scholars who support a repressive regime and they鈥檒l gleefully recite their Western publications and links with Western colleagues.
So we face a dilemma. Academic cooperation with authoritarian countries betrays the victims of anti-democratic regimes, but boycotts betray free enquiry, which is supposed to be open to everyone.
I still believe that the conference on free speech should not be boycotted. What has shocked me, however, is the participants鈥 aversion to open and frank discussion about the ethical questions raised by their decision to attend. They write to me: 鈥淲ith people like Donald Trump in the White House, who are we to pass judgement?鈥 So the compulsory Cold War mantra of 鈥渢he West is just as bad鈥 never really died.
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The notion that Western intolerance 鈥 bearing the faces of Trump, Marine Le Pen, Nigel Farage and others 鈥 should shut down our support for democrats elsewhere seems chilling. It plays into the hands of autocrats who crave nothing more than for us to mind our own business.
By all means, let鈥檚 fly off to conferences in repressive states, our bright-eyed optimism in tow. But let鈥檚 not treat a scholarly jaunt in Orb谩n鈥檚 Hungary like a weekend in Amsterdam. Let鈥檚 not become so tolerant that we end up viewing candid questions about the ethics of such events as intolerant.
Or, as the saying goes, let鈥檚 not be so open-minded that our brains fall out.
Eric Heinze is professor of law and humanities at听Queen Mary University of London. His most recent book, , is published by Oxford University Press.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:听Attend with open eyes
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