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As free speech controversies mount, Indiana University faculty pitch vote of no confidence in university leadership

IU鈥檚 postponement of an event featuring Hamas critic Mosab Hassan Yousef is the latest in a long line of recent free speech issues at the university.
Indiana University college campus

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UPDATED (April 17, 2024): Last night, during a special meeting of the Indiana University Bloomington Faculty Council, hundreds of faculty overwhelmingly passed votes of no confidence in IU President Pamela Whitten, Provost Rahul Shrivastav, and Vice Provost for Faculty and Academic Affairs Carrie Docherty. 


Concerns over free speech and academic freedom are prompting Indiana University faculty to  a vote of no confidence this month against IU鈥檚 most senior leadership. The  reported faculty will meet April 16 to consider a  calling for a vote of no confidence in IU President Pamela Whitten and two other high-level administrators. 

The  cites encroachments on academic freedom and shared governance, noting examples that raised concerns about viewpoint discrimination like the university鈥檚  of associate professor Abdulkader Sinno for an alleged violation of university room reservation policies and its  of an art exhibit featuring a prominent Palestinian artist at IU鈥檚 campus museum. 

These incidents add to IU鈥檚 years-long questionable track record on free speech issues that has placed the university on our radar and prompted repeated 鈥 but often ignored 鈥 correspondence from 果冻传媒app官方. Most recently, at IU鈥檚 request, Indiana University Hillel postponed a March 26 campus event featuring prominent pro-Israel activist and Hamas critic Mosab Hassan Yousef due to what the university dubbed 鈥.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Indiana University campus sign

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Transparency is vital when a public university curtails expressive rights, and vague security concerns must not serve as pretext for shutting down events on campus. IU  the 鈥渃redible security information鈥 raised concerns about the safety of the event and its attendees, and Yousef  to 鈥渟erious and credible security issues involving the Muslim community and several White supremacist groups鈥 involving the FBI.  

While security threats that implicate potential FBI involvement certainly can warrant total event cancellation, at the very least, the university needs to show its work by publicly demonstrating the threats it received rose to such an extraordinary level of severity that canceling was the only way to assure the safety of would-be participants and attendees. After all, when universities anticipate substantial disruptions, they must respond not by canceling or hamstringing the event, but rather with 鈥溾 to protect expressive rights 鈥渂y other, less restrictive means.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

It was clear in the Yousef event鈥檚 leadup that it was very likely to draw significant attention and controversy, as a student group  a  that would have bused in off-campus protesters to demonstrate in front of the venue. And Yousef, also known as the 鈥淪on of Hamas,鈥 has drawn  for his criticism of Islam and the Muslim community. Such high-profile and potentially disruptive protests should have prompted the university to bolster security for the event 鈥 and to postpone it only as a last resort. 

Yet IU鈥檚 track record offers reason to doubt it approached the event with the First Amendment top-of-mind. 

In January, for example, administrators  associate professor Abdulkader Sinno, who allegedly violated a minor university procedure for reserving on-campus rooms when he scheduled an event featuring an Israeli-American critic of Israel. A banishment from teaching until the fall semeseter amounted to severe discipline for what appeared to be a relatively minor infraction, rendering it seemingly pretextual in light of Sinno鈥檚 pro-Palestinian advocacy.

That same month, IU canceled an exhibit at the university鈥檚 Eskenazi Museum of Art featuring Samia Halaby, a Palestinian artist, ostensibly due to concerns about guaranteeing 鈥渢he integrity of the exhibit.鈥 But the university also  by museum staff about Halaby鈥檚 activism, suggesting they nixed the exhibit because of Halaby鈥檚 support for Palestinians. Shortly after that incident, 果冻传媒app官方 requested records about it under state open records law 鈥 two months later, we鈥檙e still waiting to receive them. 

Artist Samia Halaby sitting on a chair in her studio next to a large abstract painting

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And the university鈥檚 misdeeds on speech aren鈥檛 relegated to expression relating to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For example, in early 2023, the university stonewalled in response to 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 concern about its requirement that faculty members pledge their 鈥渧iews, beliefs, actions, and inactions do not, intentionally or unintentionally, perpetuate . . . inequity鈥 in healthcare, potentially forcing faculty to promise not to engage in wrongthink that contradicts university-approved orthodoxy. That came after the university began a three-year plan to phase in a requirement that faculty seeking tenure and promotion 鈥渟how effort toward advancing DEI鈥 in either their teaching or their extramural research and work.

In late 2022, the university consistently delayed and denied public records requests from student journalists, displaying disregard for transparency. A little earlier that year, when several faculty members emailed a faculty listserv raising personal concerns about a proposed state abortion bill, an administrator chided them and claimed they could face discipline because the administration did not approve their message. 果冻传媒app官方 wrote IU to urge it not to punish faculty for their speech about abortion, but the university did not respond substantively to our concerns.

Some at IU seem to recognize the need to protect free expression and academic freedom. In a measured victory for academic freedom, the university鈥檚 board of trustees  President Whitten鈥檚  to keep IU as the home of the Kinsey Institute 鈥 famous for its research about sexuality and relationships 鈥 while complying with a law that prohibits the use of taxpayer dollars to fund it. And both pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian student groups recently  on campus despite the university鈥檚 latest actions.

IU currently ranks a disappointing 225 out of 248 schools in FIRE鈥檚 2024 College Free Speech Rankings. Until it recognizes how its actions chill speech on campus, it risks finding itself atop of a much more ignominious list. 

FIRE鈥檚 2025 鈥10 Worst Censors鈥 list won鈥檛 be finalized for at least another nine months, but IU is already shaping up to be a contender for the annual (dis)honor. 

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