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Cal State faculty stand up for academic freedom and free speech聽

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Codi Lazar, an associate professor of geological sciences at California State University, San Bernardino, has been concerned for some time about the trend toward censorship in higher education. 

The state of academic freedom and free speech on college and university campuses is, indeed, unsettling. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 report, 鈥The Academic Mind in 2022: What Faculty Think About Free Expression and Academic Freedom on Campus,鈥 found that 40% of liberal faculty are afraid of losing their jobs or reputations due to their speech and 2 in 5 faculty self-censor more now than they did in 2020. 

In an interview with 果冻传媒app官方, Lazar described the struggle for academic freedom and free speech on campus as 鈥渁 battle between two intellectual spheres at the university鈥 鈥 one which values 鈥渇ree inquiry, open debate, open conversations, [and] free speech鈥 versus one which teaches 鈥渁 particular brand of political activism鈥 and suppresses free speech and open inquiry when they are deemed harmful. 

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Lazar believes that once a school鈥檚 administration decides that it is the role of the university to protect people from harmful words, it is no longer doing the work of a university. He pointed out that such policing on the administrative level 鈥渕eans that the universities are [becoming] places where discourse is not welcome on certain [topics]鈥 and that those who disagree with mainstream views regarding these topics are fundamentally bad people. 

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone should be in charge [of what views people can express],鈥 Lazar said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not a university anymore.鈥

鈥淚t got to the point where I felt like I had to do something.鈥 And he did. 

In fall 2021, Lazar researched public lists of faculty who are members of, or signed open letters for, organizations like Heterodox Academy and the Independent Institute, and he reached out to professors on those lists within the , the largest four-year university system in the country. He described to them his concern that faculty members feel they can鈥檛 speak up about particular topics and he expressed his desire to connect with like-minded faculty in the Cal State system to fight back against this trend. 

He received an enthusiastic response, and the group鈥檚 first meeting was a great success. About their first Zoom call, Lazar said, 鈥淔or the first time, most people there were in a room full of people where they could really say what was on their mind about certain things.鈥 

During the winter and spring semesters of 2022, the group put together in support of academic freedom, which was published in June 2022. It has garnered more than 240 signatures from faculty across the Cal State system. 

Lazar hopes that C-FAF can serve as a model and an inspiration for other faculty in the United States who are concerned about the state of free speech and academic freedom on their campuses and are looking for ways to fight censorship. 

By the time the letter was published, this group had grown into a solid body of faculty who met regularly to discuss academic freedom at Cal State schools. Their commitment inspired Lazar to form a 鈥渟teering committee鈥 with five other faculty, who named the group the CSU Faculty for Academic Freedom, or C-FAF.

Lazar says that his involvement in C-FAF has inspired him to voice his opinions. Just knowing that there are other faculty within the Cal State system who staunchly support free speech and academic freedom has enabled him not to feel alone and to express his ideas to his colleagues, even when he disagrees with them. 

鈥淭he whole experience has really empowered me to start speaking my mind,鈥 Lazar said. 鈥淚 realized that [our goal] is not just to defend academic freedom but [to] set it up psychologically so that we can practice academic freedom.鈥

He talked about conversations he鈥檚 had with his colleagues who have described to him their reluctance to express disagreement with school policy or with mainstream opinions about other hot-button issues. That kind of culture of self-censorship, he said, is 鈥渘ot sustainable for a university.鈥 

Close-up view of the California State flag waving in the wind

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The guide鈥檚 language will chill faculty speech, as faculty might rationally conclude they should self-censor to avoid any possibility of being reported for perceived racial slights.

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鈥淪o if there鈥檚 one thing that we can do,鈥 Lazar explained, 鈥渋t鈥檚 just connecting with people, saying it鈥檚 okay to say what鈥檚 on your mind.鈥

C-FAF鈥檚 steering committee has a number of goals, including:

  • Send C-FAF鈥檚 to the search committee for , as well as to provosts and presidents on campuses across the system. C-FAF hopes that some of these campus leaders will respond with public affirmations of academic freedom and free speech. 
  • Establish academic freedom and expression committees on each Cal State campus and, ideally, within the Chancellor鈥檚 Office for CSU in order to protect these values across the Cal State system. 
  • Provide a space for, and a network of, members of the Cal State community who are passionate about promoting academic freedom and intellectual diversity in the CSU system. 

Ultimately, Lazar hopes that C-FAF can serve as a model and an inspiration for other faculty in the United States who are concerned about the state of free speech and academic freedom on their campuses and are looking for ways to fight censorship. 

鈥淚 hope that people self-organize on campuses to help make sure that their voices are heard,鈥 Lazar said. 鈥淚t feels good to connect people 鈥 there are people out there, and it鈥檚 a wonderful feeling emailing someone you鈥檝e never met before and their response is, 鈥業 can鈥檛 express how happy I am to hear from you.鈥欌


Check out to read more about the group and all of

FIRE is hosting a webinar about academic freedom on June 7! Codi Lazar will be on the panel, along with Executive Director of the Council of Academic Freedom at Harvard, associate professor of history at Carleton College, and FIREattorney Adam Steinbaugh. Register .

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