Academic freedom is critical to knowledge production, yet like other forms of freedom of speech, it must be limited where it infringes on other rights or causes serious harm. In this chapter I describe the limits of academic freedom, taking as a case study Steven Salaita’s firing over tweets about Israeli state violence. In Salaita’s case and others, the concept of “civility” was deployed to limit academic freedom, yet was not defined or defended, leaving university administrators able to wield the concept to impose limitations which serve other interests. I describe how a rigorously-defined version of civility might be helpful in understanding the objectives and limitations of academic speech
It is widely recognised that academic freedom is currently under threat. But there is also considera...
This chapter offers a plea for the media to reframe its coverage of campus controversies from free e...
The scholarly debate about academic freedom focuses almost exclusively on the rights of academic fac...
The lecture was delivered on 21 May 2014.The paper begins by observing that very different notions o...
In this chapter I counter the claim that free speech is under threat in universities, and instead su...
Civility, Free Speech, and Academic Freedom in Higher Education: Faculty on the Margins represents a...
The 2014 unhiring of Professor Steven Salaita by the University of Illinois raises at least three di...
This chapter examines the phenomenon of academic freedom from a global, historical and human rights ...
Discussions about freedom of speech and academic freedom today are about the limits to those freedom...
The paper analyzes the scope of scholars’ academic freedom and maintains that it is composed of two ...
The concept of academic freedom means different things to many and different people. Many people out...
This book explores the history of the debate, from 1915 to the present, about the meaning of academi...
This is an op ed piece written for the Detroit Free Press. It was in response to an incident on the...
With special focus on free speech, as well as on classroom surveillance (proliferating in the Covid-...
In this short paper Dennis Hayes argues that academics have a responsibility to challenge convention...
It is widely recognised that academic freedom is currently under threat. But there is also considera...
This chapter offers a plea for the media to reframe its coverage of campus controversies from free e...
The scholarly debate about academic freedom focuses almost exclusively on the rights of academic fac...
The lecture was delivered on 21 May 2014.The paper begins by observing that very different notions o...
In this chapter I counter the claim that free speech is under threat in universities, and instead su...
Civility, Free Speech, and Academic Freedom in Higher Education: Faculty on the Margins represents a...
The 2014 unhiring of Professor Steven Salaita by the University of Illinois raises at least three di...
This chapter examines the phenomenon of academic freedom from a global, historical and human rights ...
Discussions about freedom of speech and academic freedom today are about the limits to those freedom...
The paper analyzes the scope of scholars’ academic freedom and maintains that it is composed of two ...
The concept of academic freedom means different things to many and different people. Many people out...
This book explores the history of the debate, from 1915 to the present, about the meaning of academi...
This is an op ed piece written for the Detroit Free Press. It was in response to an incident on the...
With special focus on free speech, as well as on classroom surveillance (proliferating in the Covid-...
In this short paper Dennis Hayes argues that academics have a responsibility to challenge convention...
It is widely recognised that academic freedom is currently under threat. But there is also considera...
This chapter offers a plea for the media to reframe its coverage of campus controversies from free e...
The scholarly debate about academic freedom focuses almost exclusively on the rights of academic fac...