Table of Contents
Harvard faculty form Council on Academic Freedom, pledge to defend free inquiry, intellectual diversity, and civil discourse
On Wednesday, Harvard professors Steven Pinker and Bertha Madras the formation of a new faculty-led council to defend academic freedom at Harvard. Describing the council, they wrote, 鈥淲e are diverse in politics, demographics, disciplines, and opinions, but united in our concern that academic freedom needs a defense team.鈥
FIRE applauds these Harvard faculty members for stepping up to defend the ideals of a free society, particularly when so many colleges and universities across the country are failing to do the same.
鈥淔ree speech is uniquely important to the university,鈥 that statement reads, 鈥渂ecause we are a community committed to reason and rational discourse. Free interchange of ideas is vital for our primary function of discovering and disseminating ideas through research, teaching, and learning.鈥
The Council on Academic Freedom at Harvard pledges to uphold 鈥 free inquiry, intellectual diversity, and civil discourse 鈥 which it derives from the 鈥淔ree Speech Guidelines鈥 adopted by Harvard faculty in 1990. 鈥淔ree speech is uniquely important to the university,鈥 that statement reads, 鈥渂ecause we are a community committed to reason and rational discourse. Free interchange of ideas is vital for our primary function of discovering and disseminating ideas through research, teaching, and learning.鈥
Indeed, Harvard is in desperate need of a group to defend open inquiry 鈥 an unimpeachable requisite to the pursuit of veritas.
Despite its reputation as the pinnacle of higher education in the United States, Harvard ranked an abysmal 170th of 203 schools in 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 2022 . About 3 in 4 Harvard students (73%) said shouting down a speaker or trying to prevent them from speaking on campus is acceptable to some degree, and roughly 1 in 4 (26%) condoned using violence to stop a disfavorable campus speech. Nearly 3 in 4 students (74%) said they are 鈥渟omewhat鈥 or 鈥渧ery鈥 uncomfortable expressing an unpopular opinion to fellow students on social media. And three-quarters of students (75%) said they worry 鈥渁 lot鈥 or 鈥渁 little鈥 about damaging their reputation because of someone misunderstanding something they say or do.
Next Thursday, FIREwill release the latest edition of 鈥淪cholars Under Fire,鈥 a report detailing attacks on scholars鈥 free speech rights since 2000. One of the key findings is that more Harvard professors 鈥 23 in total 鈥 have faced sanction attempts for their constitutionally protected speech since 2000 than at any other institution in the country. Of these sanction attempts, 18 have come from the left and five from the right. Moreover, Harvard has successfully sanctioned more scholars 鈥 12 in total 鈥 than any other school.
, former dean of Winthrop House at Harvard, is one such scholar. Sullivan, the first black man to serve as head of any Harvard house, has been a practicing defense attorney for his entire career and successfully represented the family of Michael Brown, a black man killed by police in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014. The Huffington Post , 鈥淭he Man Who Dealt the Biggest Blow to Mass Incarceration,鈥 noting that he won the release of more than 6,000 wrongfully incarcerated persons 鈥 more than anyone in U.S. history. Currently, Sullivan serves as director of the Harvard Criminal Justice Institute.
FIRE criticizes Harvard for rescinding human rights champion Ken Roth鈥檚 fellowship
News
Ken Roth is the second controversial figure to be disinvited from Harvard鈥檚 Kennedy School in recent years. It happened to military whistleblower Chelsea Manning in 2017.
But in 2019, Sullivan joined Harvey Weinstein鈥檚 defense team, a decision that sparked outrage on Harvard鈥檚 campus. A read, 鈥淔or those of you who are members of Winthrop House, do you really want to one day accept your Diploma from someone who for whatever reason, professional or personal, believes it is okay to defend such a prominent figure at the centre [sic] of the #MeToo movement?鈥
The petition continued, 鈥淔or victims of sexual assault and rape鈥 the developments of Dean Sullivan鈥檚 professional work are not only upsetting, but deeply trauma-inducing.鈥 Administrators did not renew Sullivan鈥檚 contract as dean.
In an , Sullivan rebuked Harvard administrators. 鈥淯nchecked emotion has replaced thoughtful reasoning on campus,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淔eelings are no longer subjected to evidence, analysis or empirical defense. Angry demands, rather than rigorous arguments, now appear to guide university policy.鈥
More recently, Harvard faced strong 鈥 and deserved 鈥 after it rejected the appointment of Ken Roth to a fellowship at the Harvard Kennedy School due to his criticism of Israel. Roth served for three decades as head of Human Rights Watch and, for his accomplishments, has been dubbed the 鈥済odfather鈥 of human rights. Yet, the dean of the Kennedy School vetoed his appointment, a decision which stemmed from fear that his views would upset donors.
After numerous free-speech organizations including FIREwrote to Harvard, the dean reversed course. Although FIREappreciates the eventual outcome, the fact that it took weeks of bad press for Harvard to change its mind indicates a concerning lack of commitment to free speech and viewpoint diversity.
The new Council on Academic Freedom hopes to revive that commitment.
In light of Harvard鈥檚 status as a leader in higher education, Pinker and Madras hope their efforts will also extend beyond Cambridge. 鈥淗arvard is just one university, but it is the nation鈥檚 oldest and most famous, and for better or worse, the outside world takes note of what happens here. We hope the effects will spread outside our formerly ivy-covered walls and encourage faculty and students elsewhere to rise up.鈥
The new council envisions Harvard as a bastion of academic freedom 鈥 not the nation鈥檚 leader in sanctioning scholars for unpopular speech. FIREhopes their advocacy will, indeed, make Harvard a model worthy of emulation.
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.