Table of Contents
Court filing: Yale鈥檚 lawyers make surprising claims about the school鈥檚 academic freedom promises
What good are a university鈥檚 speech-protective policies when the people in charge won鈥檛 enforce them?
That鈥檚 just one of the questions being asked after two incidents at Yale University involving high-profile donors and an alumni who sought to exert their influence over matters that are typically left to faculty and administrators.
Last week, history professor Beverly Gage resigned from her position as director of the university鈥檚 prestigious Grand Strategy program and accused Yale of failing to protect academic freedom 鈥渁mid inappropriate efforts by its donors to influence its curriculum and faculty hiring,鈥 according to .
Yale President Peter Salovey quickly apologizing to Gage and reaffirming the university鈥檚 commitment to 鈥渇ree inquiry and academic freedom.鈥 In a subsequent , Salovey explained that there are 鈥減robably two principles that are really important to honor鈥 at Yale, including 鈥渁cademic freedom to teach and do scholarship in an unfettered way,鈥 which he calls 鈥渟acrosanct at the University.鈥
Salovey鈥檚 recent statements on academic freedom are interesting, because just two weeks earlier, lawyers representing Yale filed a a lawsuit brought by Bandy Lee, a former untenured professor in the department of psychiatry whose teaching contract was not renewed in 2020 after she publicly criticized Yale alum and attorney Alan Dershowitz, along with his most prominent client, former President Donald Trump. In an email to top administrators, Dershowitz that Lee publicly 鈥渄iagnosed鈥 him as 鈥減sychotic,鈥 which he claimed to be a 鈥渟erious violation of the ethics rules of the American Psychiatric Association.鈥
Lee disputed these claims and asked for an investigation, but Yale refused and ended her employment over protected speech.
In response to Lee鈥檚 lawsuit, Yale鈥檚 lawyers went out of their way to disavow the renowned 鈥,鈥 which reshaped the university鈥檚 academic freedom policies back in 1975, calling it a 鈥渟tatement of principles, not a set of contractual promises,鈥 even though that 鈥淵ale鈥檚 policies are quite explicit; they are based on a report authored by the late C. Vann Woodward.鈥
In short, Yale officials are saying one thing in the court of public opinion 鈥 reaffirming decades of promises to protect and uphold free speech and academic freedom 鈥 while their lawyers make very different claims in a court of law.
So which is it?
Given the historical importance of the Woodward report at Yale, and the extent to which it influences the university鈥檚 academic freedom and free of speech policies, Yale鈥檚 claim 鈥 that either some or all of the report is not understood to be official Yale policy 鈥 is dubious. Indeed, over the years, Yale and its officials have frequently invoked the Woodward report as if it were official policy.
To say differently now is not only an affront to students and faculty who were given explicit and rosy promises about the university鈥檚 鈥渦nfettered鈥 support of academic freedom and free speech. That retreat also calls into question the promises Yale has made to alumni, donors, and even its accreditors to support, as stated in its , the 鈥渇ree exchange of ideas.鈥
What is the 鈥榃oodward report鈥?
On the evening of April 15, 1974, hundreds of protesters at Yale University converged on Sheffield-Sterling-Strathcona Hall, where the controversial scientist William Shockley, an enthusiastic eugenicist, was scheduled to debate conservative magazine publisher William Rusher. Before the event could begin, about 250 protesters, many carrying signs, , while hundreds more demonstrated outside. Amid shouts of 鈥淕o home, racist!鈥 and 鈥淪terilize Shockley!鈥 鈥 Rusher and Shockley hardly said a word 鈥 one Yale official stepped up to the podium and threatened the protesters with suspension.
It didn鈥檛 work.
The protests continued for 75 minutes until Yale called the whole thing off. Shockley is quoted in the calling the event the 鈥渨orst-handled disruption I鈥檝e experienced.鈥
Yale was roundly criticized for giving in to the demands of protesters, who sought to shut down an academic debate. The New York Times鈥 coverage carried the , 鈥淵ALE PROTESTERS SILENCE SHOCKLEY.鈥
The Shockley incident prompted Yale鈥檚 then-president, Kingman Brewster Jr., to call for a review of the university鈥檚 policies on academic freedom and free speech. Although Brewster Shockley鈥檚 ideas were 鈥渞eprehensible鈥 and 鈥渦nworthy of attention,鈥 he also worried that these types of disruptions 鈥 what Henry Kalven had the 鈥heckler鈥檚 veto鈥 a decade earlier 鈥 would have a chilling effect on free speech. He appointed the renowned historian C. Vann Woodward to lead the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale. Over the next several months, Woodward and the committee prepared a report for the university鈥檚 president and principal governing body, the .
Known today as the 鈥,鈥 its publication in 1975 was a milestone in the free speech movement and laid the foundation for Yale鈥檚 academic freedom policies for the next half century. The report affirmed Yale鈥檚 commitment to 鈥渁 free interchange of ideas鈥 and 鈥渢he fullest degree of intellectual freedom鈥:
The history of intellectual growth and discovery clearly demonstrates the need for unfettered freedom, the right to think the unthinkable, discuss the unmentionable, and challenge the unchallengeable. To curtail free expression strikes twice at intellectual freedom, for whoever deprives another of the right to state unpopular views necessarily also deprives others of the right to listen to those views.
The report quickly gained 鈥溾 according to Yale鈥檚 then-general counsel Jos茅 Cabranes, and was even printed 鈥渋n the same format and handsome binding used for the university鈥檚 charter and by-laws.鈥
More importantly, the report was referenced, quoted, and memorialized in Yale policies involving academic freedom and freedom of expression. For Yale to now claim in court that the Woodward report is a mere suggestion denies the unmistakable reality that the report has been and continues to be treated as official policy.
Is the Woodward report official Yale policy?
There鈥檚 a very simple reason to conclude that the Woodward report, or at least sections of it, constitute official Yale policy: because language from the report is expressly included in official Yale policies.
The section on academic freedom and freedom of expression begins with a direct reference to the Woodward report and quotes from it extensively on the importance of the 鈥渇ree interchange of ideas鈥 and the duty of the university to 鈥渄o everything possible to ensure within it the fullest degree of intellectual freedom.鈥
The Woodward report is also memorialized in the :
Freedom of expression is essential to intellectual life, and a classroom is the crucible for the development of intellectual life on a university campus. Yale has long affirmed (in the words of the Woodward Report) 鈥渢hat the primary function of a university is to discover and disseminate knowledge by means of research and teaching鈥 and has therefore developed policies on freedom of expression that carefully balance the listener鈥檚 right to conscientious protest with the right of instructors and officially invited speakers to be heard.
Bear in mind that excerpts from the Woodward report are included verbatim in existing Yale policies, indicating that some sections of the Woodward report are indeed enshrined in the school鈥檚 official policies.
The in the begins by noting that the 鈥淵ale College Faculty has formally endorsed as an official policy of Yale College the following statement from the Report of the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale, published in January 1975鈥 [emphasis added]. The statement goes on to quote several paragraphs directly from the Woodward report, including one oft-quoted section:
The primary function of a university is to discover and disseminate knowledge by means of research and teaching. To fulfill this function a free interchange of ideas is necessary not only within its walls but with the world beyond as well. It follows that the university must do everything possible to ensure within it the fullest degree of intellectual freedom.
The list goes on. The Woodward report is referenced and quoted in the statement on free expression in the , the programs and policies for the , and in the free expression statements for the , , , and .
Lastly, issued by the Office of the Secretary and Vice President for University Life reads, in part, 鈥淵ale is committed to fostering an environment that values the free expression of ideas. In 1975, Yale adopted the Report of the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale (the Woodward Report) as providing the standard for university policy. This guidance addresses the university鈥檚 freedom of expression policy as applied in a variety of situations鈥 [emphasis added].
Excerpts from the Woodward report are included verbatim in existing Yale policies.
For a 鈥渟tatement of principles鈥 that are not 鈥渃ontractual promises,鈥 as Yale鈥檚 lawyers argued, the Woodward report curiously seems to be included 鈥 by reference, by quotation, and by express adoption 鈥 in a wide range of documents intended to make firm commitments. These are not merely philosophical meditations, but institutional policy.
Having made these commitments, is it really so unreasonable that Yale鈥檚 faculty and students would rely on them? But if this is how Yale treats its commitments, what good is the word of Yale鈥檚 administration on anything else?
When Yale 'adopted' the Woodward report
Yale, at a minimum, has adopted portions of the Woodward report as policy by quoting them verbatim in important Yale documents. But what about the report as a whole? Are we to believe Yale鈥檚 lawyers when they argue the Woodward Report is merely 鈥渁 statement of principles鈥?
Let鈥檚 check Yale鈥檚 own website. According to the 鈥 no doubt a credible authority on Yale policy, and likely careful in its choice of words 鈥 and with emphasis added: 鈥淚n 1975, Yale adopted the Report of the Committee on Freedom of Expression at Yale (the Woodward Report) as providing the standard for university policy摆.闭鈥
But, certainly, if we go back to the era before websites, and perhaps to a more credible authority on Yale policy 鈥 say, the trustees of the Yale Corporation 鈥 we might discover more about how the report was received. We can鈥檛 check all of the records, because the minutes of the Yale Corporation remain for fifty years, which means the 1975 minutes will not be accessible until 2025. However, reporting in The Yale Daily News suggests the Woodward report was favorably received by both the faculty and administration. On March 24, 1975, under the headline 鈥,鈥 the student newspaper writes:
This month鈥檚 Yale Corporation session featured the approval of the controversial Woodward Committee Report.
[. . .]
The Corporation began discussion of the report at its February meeting, but tabled final consideration until it received more input from various campus faculty groups.
The Corporation gave a general endorsement to the report.
Two weeks later on April 4, 1975, then-president Brewster wrote in an in The Yale Daily News:
I joined without reservation my Corporation colleagues鈥 endorsement of the general recommendations of the Woodward Report. This includes not only the high value which an academic institution must put on untrammeled freedom of expression, but also the serious disciplinary consequences of any persistent and willful interference with such expression.
News of events at Yale traveled to Massachusetts, where reported on Feb. 4, 1975, that the 鈥淵ale College faculty approved the committee鈥檚 report on January 16 and sent it on to the Yale Corporation for its action.鈥 A noted the Yale Corporation 鈥渁dopted鈥 the report and quoted assistant law professor Lance M. Liebman, a trustee of the Yale Corporation, who said, 鈥淸t]he trustees were of the opinion that even the most unpopular views should be heard at Yale.鈥
Yale鈥檚 approval of the Woodward report was even printed in , with an article on Jan. 26, 1975, suggesting the report had been favorably received: 鈥淧resident Brewster, the Daily News and the college faculty have all endorsed it in broad terms, and next month the corporation will pass on it.鈥
More recently, in the book 鈥,鈥 legal historian Nat Hentoff observed that the 鈥淵ale Corporation accepted the Woodward report, and in its brief statement alluded鈥攚ithout naming any of those culpable鈥攖o past lapses of courage on behalf of free speech.鈥
The historical record seems abundantly clear that both the board of trustees and faculty voted in favor of resolutions either 鈥渆ndorsing鈥 or 鈥渁dopting鈥 the Woodward report, and that this positive reception was viewed by both the Yale community and the general public as an endorsement and adoption of the report. Those actions contributed to what faculty and students would reasonably expect from Yale鈥檚 commitment to academic freedom. Even if they had not formally adopted it, it has been adopted by practice. Importantly, Yale has benefited from that perception for nearly half of a century, and they鈥檙e bailing on it now over a lawsuit brought by a professor that is not likely to threaten its $31 billion endowment.
Yale鈥檚 'exemplary policy document'
Even if the intentions of Yale鈥檚 president and trustees nearly fifty years ago appear irrelevant, surely Yale has given up the ghost, expressly disclaiming the Woodward report as the relic of a bygone era, right? Well, no. Its current president, Peter Salovey, said in his 2014 address to incoming students (entitled 鈥溾) that 鈥渋t is important on occasions like this one to remind ourselves why unfettered expression is so essential on a university campus. Yale鈥檚 policies are quite explicit; they are based on a report authored by the late C. Vann Woodward鈥 [emphasis added].
Salovey 鈥 again, the chief executive of the university 鈥 has frequently invoked the Woodward report in public remarks, explicitly conveying his understanding that the report is foundational to academic freedom and freedom of speech at Yale. For example, in his 2015 message with Yale College Dean Jonathan Holloway, 鈥,鈥 they wrote:
Forty years ago, explosive debates about race and war divided Yale鈥檚 campus, and in response the university formed a core set of principles to support protest and counter-protest. Those principles, available in a document known as the Woodward Report, apply today just as they did then . . . We give the principles in this report our fullest support [emphasis added], and we urge you to read this document.
(鈥淔ullest,鈥 at least, outside of a federal court.)
This was no errant slip of the tongue. In his 2016 鈥,鈥 Salovey said, 鈥淵ale鈥檚 bedrock commitment to free expression is articulated clearly in the Woodward Report of 1974, which remains our policy today . . . Yale is very much in agreement with this view鈥 [emphasis added].
And in a 2018 statement, 鈥,鈥 the Woodward report was acknowledged as the cornerstone of the university鈥檚 academic freedom and freedom of speech policies: 鈥淵ale University is committed to the robust testing of ideas through scholarly examination and teaching. We adhere to the principles on free expression set forth in the University鈥檚 exemplary policy document, the Report of the Committee on Free Expression at Yale鈥 [emphasis added].
Even if one could argue that specific actions taken by the Yale Corporation in 1975 did not rise to the level of adopting the Woodward report as official policy, that does not appear to be the argument being made by top university officials, at least when doing so publicly suits their needs.
If anything, remarks by Yale鈥檚 current president would seem to indicate that the Woodward report is widely thought to be official school policy. Even if it is not, the very fact that the president of the university is regularly saying as much seems problematic for Yale鈥檚 motion to dismiss Lee鈥檚 lawsuit.
To be sure, Salovey鈥檚 public defenses of freedom of expression are welcome and laudable. They should be mirrored by other institutional leaders 鈥 too many of whom don鈥檛 even bother with a public defense. But those eloquent defenses mean little if Yale鈥檚 lawyers say they shouldn鈥檛 be taken seriously.
Untenured professors also have rights
The elephant in the room throughout this whole discussion is that the outcome for Bandy Lee would have been much different if she were a tenured professor. Faculty rights to academic freedom and freedom of expression should not depend on whether or not one holds tenure or is on the tenure track; however, in recent years we鈥檝e seen more and more universities violating this principle.
For Yale, its accreditation requires a commitment to academic freedom for all faculty, regardless of rank. The New England Commission of Higher Education (NECHE) accredited institutions are 鈥渃ommitted to the free pursuit and dissemination of knowledge鈥 and must assure 鈥渇aculty and students the freedom to teach and study, to examine all pertinent data, to question assumptions, and to be guided by the evidence of scholarly research.鈥
Yale鈥檚 answer to this requirement is literally the Woodward report. According to a , the school鈥檚 statement on freedom of expression explains that 鈥淵ale鈥檚 policy protecting and celebrating freedom of expression dates to the 1974 Report of the Committee on Free Expression at Yale, chaired by Sterling Professor of History C. Vann Woodward. Freedom of expression includes the ability to protest others鈥 speech鈥攂ut neither to prevent it nor prevent it from being heard by others.鈥
Moreover, the NECHE standards on Teaching, Learning and Scholarship include provisions that each institution 鈥減rotects and fosters academic freedom for all faculty regardless of rank or term of appointment.鈥
Faculty rights to academic freedom and freedom of expression should not depend on whether or not one holds tenure.
If anything, Yale鈥檚 treatment of its faculty鈥檚 academic freedom rights appears to depend a great deal on their 鈥渞ank or term of appointment.鈥 The main reason Yale was able to rid itself of Lee so easily is because she did not have the protection of tenure and worked on a short-term contract. When one of Yale鈥檚 tenured professors receives an apology regarding allegations of improper influence by major donors but an untenured professor loses her job because of improper influence by a prominent alumnus, that tells you everything you need to know about Yale鈥檚 promises.
Yale has promises to keep
Yale is a private institution, and is free to privilege other values above free speech and academic freedom, so long as those values are clearly indicated. Some private colleges do just that. Yale, however, makes many explicit promises, both on its website and in its official handbooks, of academic freedom and free speech. It cannot turn back on those obligations when it鈥檚 convenient to do so.
FIRE and faculty may now hesitate to speak out given what happened to Lee. Yale can make all the promises in the world, but when it fails to follow through on keeping those promises and, even worse, instructs attorneys to downplay those promises in a court of law, everyone in the Yale community has cause for concern that they are one bad tweet away from banishment.
What are Yale鈥檚 promises worth? If we are to believe its lawyers in court a few weeks ago, they鈥檙e not worth that fancy paper the Woodward report is printed on.
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.