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Ethics, Academic Freedom and Politics

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Title: Ethics, Academic Freedom and Politics


1
Ethics, Academic Freedom and Politics
  • Raphael Cohen-Almagor

2
Lecture Plan
  • Section 1 -- Introduction
  • Section 2 -- Guiding principles, especially
    professionalism
  • Section 3 -- Academic mission
  • Section 4 - What might compromise academic
    freedom?
  • Section 5 - The threat of commercialization
  • Section 6 Plagiarism
  • Section 7 Freedom of extramural expression
  • Section 8 Academic boycott

3
Introduction
  • Academic freedom is a subset of freedom of
    expression.
  • It is about free speech in academic setting.
  • It includes freedom of inquiry, freedom of
    association, and freedom of publication.
  • The term "academic freedom" has traditionally had
    two applications - to the freedom of the teacher
    and to that of the student.

4
Questions
  • Can an academic teach everything?
  • What kinds of pressures do we face?
  • To what extent do current trends regarding the
    commercialisation of research undermine
    fundamental academic principles such as academic
    freedom, integrity in research, openness, and
    serving the public interest?
  • Are there any limits on freedom of extramural
    expression?

5
Guiding Principles
  • Conscience people should be true to their
    conscience, able to express their mind
    notwithstanding what other are thinking.
  • The Millian Truth Principle search for truth
    Galileo Galilei
  • Responsibility
  • Transparency and honesty be aware and alert
    others of compromising factors and interests
  • Independence thus student papers should raise
    their own funding.

6
Professionalism
  • Professionalism we expect certain standards to
    be met because of the academic setting.
  • The function of academic freedom is not to
    liberate individual professors from all forms of
    institutional regulation, but instead to ensure
    that faculty within the university are free to
    engage in professionally competent forms of
    inquiry and teaching, which are necessary for the
    realization of the social purposes of the
    university.

7
Professionalism
  • Academics are professional experts in the
    production of knowledge.
  • Thus they cannot teach the flat earth theory and
    other falsehoods in an academic setting.
  • Academic freedom is not an individual right.
  • Context Protocols of the Elders of Zion, not in
    a course on Jewish civilization yes in a course
    on hate and bigotry
  • Organized institutions of peer-review and faculty
    self-regulation on the basis of a professed
    skepticism of professional norms.

8
Professionalism
  • The conception of academic freedom as an
    individual right seems superficially attractive
    because it appears to promise greater security
    for academic dissent.
  • But in reality it would risk undercutting the
    professional norms necessary for the external
    defense of academic freedom.
  • Without this defense there are forms of political
    power that might be ready to seize control of the
    academic community.

9
Professionalism
10
Professionalism
11
Professionalism
  • You did not expect me to show you an empty slide.

12
Mission
  • The mission of a university is multi-dimensional.
  • The importance of academic freedom is most
    clearly perceived in the light of the purpose for
    which universities exist.
  • These are three in number
  • To promote inquiry and advance the sum of human
    knowledge.
  • To provide general instruction to the students.
  • To develop experts for various branches of the
    public service.

13
Mission
  • In other words, academic freedom is about
    teaching, research and extra-mural utterance and
    action.
  • Just like teaching and research, the service
    mission can entail a wide variety of activities.
  • University should be the hotbed for new ideas.
  • Academia is the only profession that is able to
    reflect, scrutinize, and develop long-term
    processes (to be distinguished from journalism,
    for instance).

14
Mission
  • Scholars must be absolutely free not only to
    pursue their investigations but to declare the
    results of their researches, no matter where they
    may lead them or to what extent they may come
    into conflict with accepted opinion.
  • To be of use to the legislator or the
    administrator, they must enjoy their complete
    confidence in the disinterestedness of their
    conclusions.

15
What might undermine academic freedom?
  • Business, money
  • Pressure
  • your supervisor,
  • Superiors (Chairperson, Dean, senior admin),
  • peers,
  • Business (university donors),
  • politics,
  • social conformity

16
What might undermine academic freedom?
  • Jack Kevorkian - UCLA
  • Textbooks.

17
Compromising effects - Patronage
  • In some countries, most notably Germany, Austria
    and Italy, it is almost impossible to receive a
    position on the basis of merit alone.
  • Camps you support my candidate I support yours.
  • People are not free to express their minds.

18
Compromising effects - Biography writing
  • Authorized v. Unauthorized biographies of living
    politicians, judges and other decision-makers.
  • Compromising effects.

19
Compromising effects real politics
  • Conscience v. real politic
  • Scholars who research contemporary China
  • Professor Yitzhak Shichor
  • Professor Ross Terrill
  • http//almagor.blogspot.com

20
Compromising effects Business
  • The story of Edward A. Ross who advocated in
    1900 against the importation of cheap Asian
    labor.
  • He had so profoundly distressed the Founder and
    proprietor of Stanford University, Mrs. Leland
    Stanford, who wrote president David Starr Jordan
  • I must confess I am weary of Professor Ross, and
    I think he ought not to be retained at Stanford
    University. . . . I trust that before the close
    of this semester Professor Ross will have
    received notice that he will not be re-engaged
    for the new year.
  • Jordan obeyed his instructions. Ross was fired.

21
Commercialization
  • Some universities feel that they have a
    responsibility towards the socio-economic region
    they are located in.
  • A responsibility which may involve helping to
    enhance the regions economic development, not
    only by education but also in other ways.
  • Many universities accept funding from industry
    and engage in commercial activities.

22
Commercialization
  • Results of academic research which, not so long
    ago, would have been made available in the public
    domain for other researchers to build on, are
    increasingly becoming the subjects of various
    kinds of intellectual property rights,
    particularly (but not only) in biomedical,
    chemical and engineering fields.
  • The increase in industry funding of academic
    research lead to the hampering of research, the
    skewing of research priorities, and the risk of
    conflicts of interest threatening the integrity
    of research.

23
Commercialization
  • Universities are becoming too business-like.
  • Admittedly, it could be argued that additional
    income for the universities makes them less
    dependent on governments, but an unhealthy
    dependence on industry may be more problematic in
    terms of potential threats to academic freedom.
  • Universities like businesses compete with each
    other, make money and use their patents against
    other universities.

24
Commercialization and Ethics
  • Tel Aviv University Buchman School of Law
  • Could be worse, I imagine Tel Aviv School of
    Morality.

25
Plagiarism
  • Twenty years ago, plagiarism was seen as an
    isolated misdemeanour, restricted to a small
    group of mostly students.
  • Today it is widely recognized as a ubiquitous,
    systemic issue, compounded by the accessibility
    of content in the virtual environment.
  • Companies make money by selling academic papers
    to those who wish to pay their way.
  • Papers are tailor-made to ones needs and
    abilities.

26
Plagiarism
  • This might create a two-tier education system
    One for those who work and acquire education
  • another for those who pay to advance to the next
    stage in life.

27
Freedom of Extramural Expression
  • Freedom of extramural expression refers to a
    professors freedom to speak in public in her
    role as a citizen in ways that are unrelated to
    professional expertise.
  • An example might be a professor of chemistry who
    elects to speak out against the war in
    Afghanistan.
  • The issue for analysis is whether and how
    professors should be immune from sanction for
    such speech, even if it causes damage to the
    university that employs them.

28
Freedom of Extramural Expression
  • It is neither possible nor desirable to deprive a
    college professor of the political rights
    vouchsafed to every citizen.
  • The American Statement of Principles on Academic
    Freedom and Tenure of 1940 said

29
American Statement of Principles on Academic
Freedom and Tenure
  • College and university teachers are citizens,
    members of a learned profession, and officers of
    an education institution. When they speak or
    write as citizens, they should be free from
    institutional censorship or discipline, but their
    special position in the community imposes special
    obligations. As scholars and educational
    officers, they should remember that the public
    may judge their profession and their institution
    by their utterances. Hence they should at all
    times be accurate, should exercise appropriate
    restraint, should show respect for the opinions
    of others, and should make very effort to
    indicate that they are not speaking for the
    institution.

30
Holocaust denial
  • Professor Arthur Butz, Northwestern University,
    uses university server to put on a blog denying
    the Holocaust.
  • In violation of the principles outlined above,
    shaking off the special obligations not
    accurate, without appropriate restraint,
    confusing between him and his institution.
  • Thats on purpose To confer legitimacy on his
    ideas.
  • Universities can insulate themselves from such a
    threat by categorically disclaim any
    responsibility for the extramural expression of
    their faculty.

31
Political Boycott
  • Academics should not discriminate against
    colleagues on grounds of race, sex, religion,
    national or ethnic group, or other personal
    characteristics.
  • The story of Dr. Miriam Shlesinger.

32
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