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Tracker: University Responses to Chinese Censorship

See 果冻传媒app官方's tracking of colleges' and universities' responses to Hong Kong National Security Law and other Chinese censorship efforts in education.

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The recently imposed on Hong Kong offers severe penalties for violations of vague bans on 鈥渟eparatism and subversion鈥 and applies even to non-residents, making it a threat to anyone who violates the law and later enters Hong Kong or mainland China. This law is particularly troublesome to students and faculty members discussing issues sensitive to China in college classes, especially students based in China or Hong Kong.

Between teaching online to students behind the and navigating the national security law, 2020 has brought new challenges to all faculty members, especially those who teach about topics that may be considered sensitive or controversial in China. Those challenges have continued into 2021. (For an in-depth of these challenges, see the amicus curiae FIREfiled in a lawsuit, brought by Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, against a now-rescinded U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement policy requiring international students who were already in the U.S. to leave the country if their classes were online-only.)

It is vital to document how universities respond to these challenges that present threats to academic freedom and freedom of expression at universities around the world. This page serves as a resource to track these responses, by country and institution.

Have there been similar developments at your university? Let us know at targetedadvocacy@thefire.org.

United States

George Washington University

In August, George Washington University posted on its website a notice specifically for Chinese students on its data privacy page. The language appears to suggest that GW will hand over student data, including online course contributions, to satisfy law enforcement or government requests 鈥 presumably from Chinese authorities. GW shortly took down the notice from its page, but did not replace it with more information about what data protections Chinese students can expect. In response, the George Washington University Student Association Senate passed a demanding GW retract its data privacy rules for Chinese students and 鈥渋nstitute safety precautions that [other] universities have installed such as codifying names, providing VPNs, and Institutional Support for International 果冻传媒app官方.鈥

Princeton University

Assistant professor Rory Truex, who teaches Chinese politics, the Wall Street Journal in August regarding the national security law in Hong Kong: 鈥淚f we, as a Chinese teaching community, out of fear stop teaching things like Tiananmen or Xinjiang or whatever sensitive topic the Chinese government doesn鈥檛 want us talking about, if we cave, then we鈥檝e lost.鈥 Truex stated he will not remove class material but will warn students that it could be considered sensitive to China鈥檚 government. He will also utilize blind grading and assign codes to student work so that it will not be associated with their names. In January 2021, Truex to students in his class, POL 362: Chinese Politics, that 鈥渢he course contains material that the Chinese government would find sensitive.鈥 For that reason, he warned that he 鈥渞ecommend[s] that students who are currently residing in China should not take the course this year.鈥

Amherst College

Assistant professor of political science Kerry Ratigan in August that she has concerns about online teaching and would warn students ahead of time about the material covered in class. She also suggested offering students the ability to anonymously chat in class.

Harvard University

According to , Harvard鈥檚 Information Technology department released a faculty web manual in August in light of concerns about internet teaching, and that 鈥淯niversity spokesperson Jason A. Newton and HUIT spokesperson Tim Bailey declined to comment beyond the HUIT document.鈥 Professors Peter K. Bol and William C. Kirby the Crimson that they had not experienced issues in their 鈥淧ower and Civilization: China鈥 course, despite teaching students located in China. David E. Sanger, who is teaching 鈥淐entral Challenges of American National Security, Strategy, and the Press,鈥 said that he warned students to let him know if they had security concerns, but that he 鈥渨ould never censor his class material due to political pressure.鈥

In Harvard Business School, associate professor in political science Meg Rithmire 鈥淸i]t鈥檚 more about harm mitigation鈥 this academic year. She told the Wall Street Journal in August that she plans to discuss Uighur Muslims, Hong Kong, and Taiwan in her business administration course. Rithmire says Harvard Business School will offer 鈥渁mnesty鈥 to all students so class participation, perhaps on sensitive topics, will not be part of final grades.

Yale University

Yale faculty Denise Ho and Daniel Mattingly鈥檚 fall courses will some measures meant to protect students from experiencing legal repercussions for class content but they will not remove content from their syllabi. Mattingly, who teaches about the Tiananmen Square massacre and China鈥檚 Uighurs, is including a warning in his syllabus for students who are 鈥渞esiding in mainland China or Hong Kong, or are a PRC citizen.鈥 Ho, a history professor teaching about Hong Kong, will allow students to submit work anonymously and intends to create a 鈥渃ircle of trust鈥 by not recording the seminar sessions or sharing what is said by students in class. In August, Yale Daily News that Faculty of Arts and Sciences guidelines direct instructors to keep online contributions confidential and to avoid recording classes. However, Vice Provost for Global Strategy Pericles Lewis wrote that 鈥淸w]e are all very concerned to protect the freedom of discussion and academic inquiry for students participating in our classes,鈥 but believes it鈥檚 鈥渉ighly unlikely that anything a student says in a Yale classroom (even a virtual one) would become an issue in China.鈥

University of Pennsylvania

Political science professor Avery Goldstein will prospective students that his class will include sensitive discussions, so they can decide for themselves if they want to take the risk. Avery says they should 鈥渓eave it up to the students whether they enroll, because it is ultimately their lives that are going to be affected鈥 and that he 鈥渨ill make it clear that there is nothing [he] can do to protect them.鈥

Georgetown University

James Millward, a professor of Chinese and Central Asian history, explained to in August: 鈥淚f you read the text of the National Security Law, it is very broad and virtually any US-taught class dealing with contemporary China will have material that the CCP could, if it wished, call subversive or separatist鈥攚hich could have very severe consequences for a student found with such things on their laptop, or downloading a video of a class with such content from a Canvas or Panopto server.鈥 Millward also warned GU to consider the privacy and safety measures associated with using Zoom and other online learning software.

Kristen Looney, assistant professor of Asian studies and government, said she would ban recording of her classes or distribution of class content and had 鈥渄ecided to omit some of the more extreme risks from her syllabi.鈥 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want it to have a chilling effect on the class and really compromise academic freedom or free speech, and I do think that the probability of somebody being targeted by the Chinese government is low,鈥 Looney told The Hoya. 鈥淏ut the problem is we have no idea how these new policies are going to be enforced because they were just implemented. So, I have to err on the side of caution and try to protect everybody鈥檚 safety, while at the same time maintaining academic freedom, and it鈥檚 a really difficult balance.鈥 On the administrative side, Chief Information Officer Judd Nicholson said GU is requiring students to use a password authentication system and has offered suggestions for Zoom security.

Dartmouth College

Dartmouth released a memo to faculty about the threats posed to students by the national security law in Hong Kong. According to student newspaper , the memo 鈥渞ecommends that professors 鈥榓lert and inform鈥 students about the potential legal liabilities鈥 of the law, offers 鈥渁 number of technical measures, including removing identifying information and metadata from submitted assignments, disabling video on Zoom and turning off recording and transcription,鈥 and suggests 鈥渟tudents be excused from participation grades in assignments where anonymity is 鈥榥ot possible.鈥欌 In regards to concerns about safety on Zoom, Information, Technology and Consulting chief information officer Mitchel Davis said Zoom is 鈥渁s focused as any other company on making sure that it is secure鈥 and that security is 鈥渘ot a problem anymore.鈥 But Davis told The Dartmouth that 鈥渙ne of the technical changes suggested in the memo 鈥 allowing students to join Zoom calls from 鈥榯hrowaway鈥 email accounts 鈥 may also be illegal in China upon further consideration.鈥

International students at Dartmouth also to the paper in September about the risks they may face by engaging in sensitive conversations about China. One student from Hong Kong said that there is 鈥渘o clear way of knowing鈥 what will violate the law, which 鈥渋nduces citizens to self-censor.鈥 鈥淭he fact that college faculties are worried that they might put students in trouble, it鈥檚 akin to the Chinese government holding overseas students hostage,鈥 he told The Dartmouth. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e using those overseas students for putting pressure on U.S. campuses to silence them or to tone them down.鈥 Another student from China said that she values the academic freedom offered in the United States: 鈥淭hose kinds of freedoms, or liberties, should not be taken as granted.鈥

University of California, Irvine

Professor Jeffrey Wasserstrom on Twitter in October that he has been teaching his modern Chinese history fall course 鈥渟ans the Zoom meetings UCI recommends, due to the engagement w/topics considered sensitive by Beijing & having students all over taking it鈥 and is emphasizing papers and one-on-one discussion. Wasserstrom added that he is 鈥渘ot avoiding sensitive subjects鈥 and is 鈥渄oing what [he] can to make the class meaningful w/no self censoring, no avoiding touchy topics.鈥

University of Chicago

Tom Ginsburg, Leo Spitz Professor of International Law and Professor of Political Science, Chicago Maroon student journalist Devin Haas: 鈥淚 do think that, in our era of remote attendance, those of us who teach relevant subjects should be aware if we have students who are physically located in Chinese territory, including Hong Kong, that might be at risk.鈥 Ginsburg added that he has not received guidance from the university on precautionary measures he should take, but supports blind grading and opt-out discussions. Haas that, given its 鈥渓ong, proud commitment to freedom of speech,鈥 UChicago should adopt measures to protect students from Hong Kong against legal repercussions.

Syracuse University

Political science professor Dimitar Gueorguiev, who teaches Chinese politics, told that SU has not instituted official guidelines or protections for international students. Gueorguiev, one of the authors of a piece titled 鈥淗ow To Teach China This Fall,鈥 added that he does not permit recordings of his class. The Daily Orange reported in October that 鈥淕ueorguiev emphasized the importance of academic freedom and resistance toward any form of self-censorship, while also maintaining awareness of political dangers, especially as they pertain to SU鈥檚 international students.鈥

University of California, Davis

The Davis Enterprise in December that UC Davis professor Eddy U would allow students in his class about inequality in China to join Zoom discussions and submit papers anonymously. U committed to not 鈥渨atering down or changing the content鈥 of his class, acknowledging that his teaching could violate the national security law. U said, 鈥淚鈥檒l put it this way: I don鈥檛 have plans to go to China.鈥 Additionally, UC Davis East Asian Languages and Cultures Chair Michael Dylan Foster a syllabus disclaimer his department could use so prospective students are notified if a class 鈥渕ight be deemed sensitive or illegal by certain governments.鈥 A former UC Davis student from Hong Kong, who is now a student at UC Berkeley, said she had written a paper about China鈥檚 human rights abuses in the spring, but 鈥渨ould hesitate to write that kind of essay now.鈥 According to The Enterprise, University of California Office of the President communications strategist Stett Holbrook said a university-wide response had not been initiated yet: 鈥淚n consultation with UC鈥檚 International FIREand Scholars directors, faculty members have been deciding how to best and most appropriately address the matter in the classroom.鈥

United Kingdom

University of Southampton, King鈥檚 College London, Queen Mary University of London, and the University of York are part of a pilot project, announced in July, using a free provided by Chinese internet firm Alibaba Cloud that allows students in China to access specific resources offered by their universities. The service will give students access only to the material their universities provide, and all of the material will have to be on an 鈥渁llow鈥 list. JISC (formerly the Joint Information Systems Committee), which provides digital services for UK universities, averred on the question of academic freedom, saying 鈥渁ll course materials have been within regulations. Nothing was altered or blocked.鈥

Oxford University

In response to the national security law, Oxford is asking students studying China to submit papers anonymously and will charge students with disciplinary offenses if they record classes or share them with non-members. Associate professor of Chinese politics Patricia Thornton The Guardian that she will not change class content, but will ensure anonymity to protect students. 鈥淭he entire spirit of the tutorial, which rests on collective critical inquiry, rises or falls on the ability of the institution to guarantee free speech, freedom of expression and academic freedom for all,鈥 Thornton said. 鈥淏ut how to do this in the wake of China鈥檚 new national security law for Hong Kong, which invites self-censorship with its lack of red lines and generous extraterritorial provision? How does one protect academic freedom when China claims the right to intervene everywhere?鈥

Warwick University

Professor of politics and international studies Shaun Breslin that he initially considered steering Hong Kong students away from sensitive courses, but 鈥測ou can鈥檛 do that because that鈥檚 denying them an opportunity that every other student from every other part of the world is allowed to do.鈥 In November he BBC, 鈥淚t would be falling into the trap of not self-censorship, but of censoring other people.鈥 Instead, Warwick will work on developing guidelines, like advising that faculty preserve student anonymity, to protect international students.

University of Leeds

In February 2021, editor-in-chief and founder of Hong Kong Free Press Tom Grundy that he had withdrawn from an invitation to give a class lecture over Zoom at the School of Media and Communication at the University of Leeds. According to Grundy, he withdrew after the lecturer asked him 鈥渢o not focus on HK protests per se鈥 out of 鈥渟afety concerns鈥 because over half of the students in the class are from China. He , 鈥淚 sympathise w/the pressure mainland students-studying-abroad may be under, but don鈥檛 think western institutions should bend to it. I鈥檝e often done talks w/mainland students 鈥 they ask great Q鈥檚, never a problem.鈥

Soas University of London

In May 2021, The Times that Soas University of London issued guidance to academics advising them to safeguard against the national security law. The guidance warns academics not to record classes in case attendees are from Hong Kong or China and to provide options for anonymity and also warns them that material in their notes or devices could put them at risk while traveling in the region. Importantly, the guidance states: 鈥淪elf-censoring in order to avoid such risks is, needless to say, unacceptable and should not be contemplated.鈥 鈥淗ow we teach China is potentially affected by this law, with some of what we normally do now liable to prosecution,鈥 it said. 鈥淭he law is vague about what constitutes subversion, making the implications even more worrying,鈥 Soas regarding the national security law guidance. 鈥淎 whole host of topics are potentially off-limits because of this law, topics that lie at the heart of the social sciences and humanities . . . ethnicity, sovereignty, identity, the quality of governance etc. Teachers and students on China-related modules could therefore find themselves deemed criminals because of their verbal or written statements pertaining to many topics such as Taiwan, Hong Kong, social movements, the party-state鈥檚 handling of coronavirus, ethnic unrest, ethnic identities, language policy, state surveillance, the implications of President Xi extending his term indefinitely etc.鈥

Canada

University of Toronto

University of Toronto faculty have been about issues of 鈥減rivacy, surveillance and free inquiry鈥 arising 鈥渁mong students who reside in countries with different laws, cultural norms and monitoring by law enforcement.鈥 Like a number of UK universities, U of T is using Alibaba Cloud to provide students in China with access to course materials. The Globe and Mail in September that a U of T teaching assistant 鈥渟aid he was warned that when moderating online group discussions there will be ethical concerns around teaching students in China鈥 and that 鈥渉e was advised to steer discussions away from controversial topics that could run students into trouble.鈥

University of Waterloo

The University of Waterloo is also Alibaba Cloud for Chinese students. Political science professor Emmet Macfarlane, who said he would not alter class content, said in September that 鈥淲aterloo warned staff that [Alibaba Cloud] is subject to Chinese law and surveillance by authorities.鈥 Associate Vice-President David DeVidi stated that the university 鈥渨ill not give our faculty guidance to alter their course content.鈥

Australia and New Zealand

The University of Sydney, University of South Australia, The University of Adelaide, University of Canberra, and The University of Melbourne are among 30 universities also with Alibaba Cloud to provide communications between students in China and their universities in Australia and New Zealand.

University of Technology Sydney

In February, a University of Technology Sydney internal working group a report on the challenges the university may face while teaching students in China. The report warned of the 鈥渞isk that the Chinese Government will see鈥 the university鈥檚 content as 鈥渦napproved teaching鈥 and 鈥渢urn off our 鈥榰ts.edu.au鈥 domain and other related systems.鈥 The report also declared, 鈥淲hile there are no UTS guidelines on this the general advice to avoid topics that could be seen as critical or politically inaccurate eg. regarding territories in China.鈥 UTS Deputy Vice-Chancellor Shirley Alexander stated that staff were only given on technology use in China, not the memo鈥檚 suggestions regarding censorship of content. 鈥淭hat memo was not made public. There was never any direction to staff to self censor,鈥 Alexander The Sydney Morning Herald. 鈥淔IREare learning the content that all students learn. We wouldn鈥檛 change the content just to suit the students who are in China. We would not do that.鈥

La Trobe University

In August, vice-chancellor John Dewar emailed senior La Trobe officials to discuss which courses offered at the university could prompt concerns for students from Hong Kong afraid of being reported to China for their academic contributions. A faculty member South China Morning Post, 鈥淚 think universities need to take some actions to ensure they are not putting these students in harm鈥檚 way. For my university, at least we鈥檙e starting that and that鈥檚 positive.鈥 SCMP also reports that 鈥渢he audit had only found one course in which Hongkonger and mainland students were enrolled together, and no further action had been taken as the course had already ended鈥 but that 鈥渢he process would be repeated in the upcoming semester.鈥 Nick Bisley, dean of humanities and social sciences at La Trobe, that many universities are 鈥渄eveloping plans to protect students鈥 but that 鈥淸t]here鈥檚 no question of this affecting what or how we teach, it鈥檚 a matter of helping protect our students.鈥

University of Sydney

South China Morning Post in November that a humanities lecturer 鈥渟aid that when he asked a senior colleague for advice on how to broach sensitive topics such as the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown and Taiwan during video classes on Zoom, he was advised to self-censor.鈥 The lecturer said 鈥淸t]heir advice was 鈥榶ou already know what to do. You should cut any materials that could endanger students鈥欌 and while he 鈥渉ad not really鈥 listened to the colleague鈥檚 recommendations, there were 鈥渓imits and uncertainties.鈥

Australian National University

Chinese history and language lecturer Esther Klein in November that 鈥淸a]s long as authoritarian governments exist, there is no true protection from them.鈥 She told South China Morning Post: 鈥淭he best thing we can do as teachers is to show how good it is to be able to freely and fearlessly discuss any issue whatsoever. We need to show that the benefits of this outweigh its dangers and disadvantages, and that, in a free marketplace of ideas, good ideas can and generally do win out over bad ones.鈥 However, Klein still intends to take precautionary measures, including anonymous presentation of student work, and will not be recording online classes.

University of Melbourne

A spokesperson regarding the national security law, 鈥淲herever concerns or issues arise regarding the exercise of free speech, the university seeks to take all steps to safeguard this freedom within its capacity to do so.鈥

Monash University in Melbourne

Lecturer in Chinese studies Jonathan Benney in November, 鈥淚 can say that some students from the People鈥檚 Republic of China are indeed concerned about whether the work they submit can be observed by people other than academics 鈥 for example, when essays are to be submitted online, some students have checked with me who can see their work.鈥 Benney added that this 鈥減articular situation is covered by what we already do,鈥 and that Monash University had not made any plans to alter teaching at this time.

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