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Report: Harvard Law School administrator canceled 2015 event on dissent in China
Today, The Harvard Crimson released an detailing Harvard University鈥檚 relationship with China against the backdrop of the complicated U.S.-China relations. The entire piece is worth a read 鈥 especially its troubling account from Chinese dissident and human rights lawyer Teng Biao.
Just over five years ago, Teng says, a 鈥減owerful person鈥 at Harvard Law School told him to postpone an event that could harm the institution鈥檚 relationship with China.
Teng was a visiting fellow at Harvard Law School in 2015; he had accepted a position there as part of the . Teng鈥檚 criticisms of the Chinese Communist Party for harassment from China鈥檚 government and he felt unsafe returning to mainland China.
The Crimson that in early 2015, Teng had been working to schedule an event at Harvard to discuss human rights in China with fellow dissident Chen Guangcheng, but the plans quickly went sideways because the timing coincided with then-Harvard president Drew Faust鈥檚 trip to Beijing.
[O]n Feb. 11, the powerful person at Harvard gave Teng the first call.
鈥淗e told me to cancel the talk,鈥 Teng says. 鈥淗e told me the time we were supposed to give our talk, that day was when the Harvard president would fly back from Beijing. And a few weeks before that, the Harvard president was meeting Xi Jinping.鈥 The administrator told him hosting an event with two Chinese dissidents only days after a historic meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and then University President Drew G. Faust would 鈥渆mbarrass鈥 Harvard, Teng recalls.
鈥淚t was not about the title or the topics 鈥 but because of ourselves,鈥 Teng says. 鈥淲e ourselves are sensitive.鈥
Teng and the other organizers persisted, hoping they could find another Harvard venue. 鈥淲e tried to avoid him, but eventually we realized we were not able to,鈥 he says.
The second phone call, on March 10, was a formal and final warning. The powerful person called Teng to his office and told him the event would embarrass the University and potentially threaten the continuation of collaborative programs and joint research with China. The administrator asked Teng to 鈥減ostpone鈥 the event, and Teng finally agreed.
Chen Guangcheng told The Crimson that the postponement was not temporary: 鈥淚t was just another way to cancel it completely.鈥
The report also states that Teng was asked to promise not to speak about the cancellation.
Though Teng did not reveal the name of the 鈥減owerful person鈥 due to 鈥渇ears of potential employment retaliation,鈥 The Crimson reports that he was Harvard Law School Vice Dean for International Legal Studies William P. Alford 鈥 who admits he interfered.
However, sources familiar with the incident speaking under the condition of anonymity confirmed that that person was Professor William P. Alford, Harvard Law School鈥檚 Vice Dean for International Legal Studies. Throughout his career, Alford has met with current and past presidents of China and Taiwan and spoken at the Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party.
鈥淗aving for years served on the Scholars at Risk Committee and for decades hosted a broad range of scholars and law related activists from China at HLS, I tried to make Dr. Teng鈥檚 time here academically fruitful,鈥 Alford wrote in an emailed statement. 鈥淚 invited him to speak in my class around the time in question, introduced him to colleagues and met with him frequently about his research, his plans, and his family. I did ask that he schedule the event in question after our University President had left Beijing.鈥
As The Crimson explains, it鈥檚 possible that Teng 鈥渨as the victim of a one-time exception at Harvard,鈥 and that the public may never know what behind-the-scenes decisions led Alford to call Teng. Maybe the Chinese government requested the cancellation. Maybe no request was made, but administrators felt cancellation would be prudent.
However, we do know this: Such interference in academic events is unacceptable.
As FIREhas written time and time again, U.S. institutions鈥 relationships with China 鈥 whether friendly or sour 鈥 should not determine what speech is allowed on campuses. That includes speech on U.S. campuses, satellite American campuses in China, and speech from Chinese students and scholars in the United States, too.
Universities like Harvard (which, after all, promises free expression and academic freedom) fundamentally abandon their mission if they choose to censor political debate to appease a government with which they wish to establish or maintain ties. And make no mistake: Moving back the date of an event to a more politically-convenient time isn鈥檛 much better than canceling it outright.
American universities enter situations of great moral hazard when they become involved with authoritarian regimes, and all too often, they are not handling it well. Harvard owes its community a candid explanation of how this cancellation occurred, and a promise that it will not apply similar pressure in the future.
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