Academic Freedom Under Siege

Academic Freedom Under Siege
Title Academic Freedom Under Siege PDF eBook
Author Zhidong Hao
Publisher Springer Nature
Total Pages 269
Release 2020-11-02
Genre Education
ISBN 3030491196

Download Academic Freedom Under Siege Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book argues that academic freedom in higher education in East Asia, the U.S. and Australia is under stress. Academic freedom means freedom to teach, research, and serve in multiple political and social roles based on professional principles. It is closely linked to shared governance, in which academics participate in and influence decision making in core academic concerns such as choosing new faculty, faculty promotion, tenure decisions and the approval of new academic programs. In different countries and regions, the duress confronting academic freedom may come from different directions, and the ability of faculty to share power can vary greatly. In authoritarian mainland China, it is mostly political and ideological controls that greatly affect academic freedom, and shared governance is very much limited. In semi-democracies like Hong Kong and Macau and democracies like Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, the U.S. and Australia, corporatization and commercialization have had great impact on both academic freedom and shared governance. The result is that the roles professors play within academia are continually being diminished and the academic profession is struggling to maintain its ground. Similar developments are also occurring in Europe. These developments should cause great concern to educators, researchers and policymakers everywhere. The authors collected here present attempts to learn from current practice in order to move policy into directions that will help protect higher education as a common good. This book highlights the importance of academic freedom and provides insights into the ways it is being infringed both by commercialization and corporatization on the one hand and political repression on the other. It vividly illustrates detailed case studies and empirical data that make it a compelling read.- Professor Ruth Hayhoe, University of Toronto, Canada Academic freedom is as important today as at any time in the last century. The authors point out the challenges that academic freedom faces on a global scale. The import of the book is in its comparative perspective steeped in data and analysis. Thoughtful. Cogent. Compelling. - Professor William G. Tierney and Professor Wilbur-Kieffer, University of Southern California, United States

No University Is an Island

No University Is an Island
Title No University Is an Island PDF eBook
Author Cary Nelson
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 300
Release 2011-10
Genre Education
ISBN 0814725333

Download No University Is an Island Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This text offers a comprehensive account of the social, political, and cultural forces undermining academic freedom. At once witty and devastating, it confronts these threats with frankness, then offers a prescription for higher education's renewal.

Dissent and Disruption

Dissent and Disruption
Title Dissent and Disruption PDF eBook
Author Richard A. Siggelkow
Publisher
Total Pages 280
Release 1991
Genre Education
ISBN

Download Dissent and Disruption Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Sigglekow chronicles events at SUNY at Buffalo during the campus unrest of the Vietnam era, drawing on his experiences as Dean of Students and Vice President for Student Affairs to place student activism--and the 1960s--into perspective. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

Silenced!

Silenced!
Title Silenced! PDF eBook
Author Bruce E. Johansen
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages 217
Release 2007-05-30
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0275996875

Download Silenced! Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book is about people whose beliefs and affiliations have opposed powerful interests in the present-day United States. This eclectic group of people and controversial issues, from climate-change scientists who have been censored by the Bush administration to Muslims accused of terrorism, have one thing in common. All of them straddle the limits of what Noam Chomsky has called permissible debate as defined by dominant political and economic institutions and individuals. The central thesis is that restriction of free inquiry is harmful to our culture because it inhibits the search for knowledge. Johansen presents case studies in the borderlands of free speech in a Jeffersonian cast—an intellectual framework assuming that open debate—even of unpopular ideas—is essential to accurate perception of reality. This book is about people whose ideological circumstances have found them opposing established beliefs in our times—scholars advocating the Palestinian cause in a very hostile intellectual environment, for example, as well as climate scientists defending themselves against the de-funding of their laboratories by defenders of fossil-fuel interests; opponents of creation science under assault for teaching what once was regarded as household-variety biology (a.k.a. Darwinism); Marxists in a political system dominated by neoconservatives. The central thesis that unites this diverse array of controversies is that shutting down free inquiry—most notably for points of view deemed unpopular—dumbs us all down by restraining the search for knowledge, which demands open inquiry. We have been told when going to war, as in Iraq, that freedom isn't free, the unstated assumption being that our armed forces are fighting and dying to safeguard our civil rights at home and abroad. During recent years, however, freedom to inquire and debate without retribution has been under assault in the United States. This assault has been carried out under a distinctly Orwellian cast, under Newspeak titles such as the Patriot Act, parts of which might as well be described more honestly as the Restriction of Freedom of Inquiry Act. The information gathered here will interest (and probably anger) anyone who is concerned with protecting robust, free inquiry in a nation that takes seriously its freedom to speak out, and to define truth through open debate.

No University Is an Island

No University Is an Island
Title No University Is an Island PDF eBook
Author Cary Nelson
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 301
Release 2010-03-03
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0814758606

Download No University Is an Island Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The modern university is sustained by academic freedom; it guarantees higher education’s independence, its quality, and its success in educating students. The need to uphold those values would seem obvious. Yet the university is presently under siege from all corners; workers are being exploited with paltry salaries for full-time work, politics and profit rather than intellectual freedom govern decision-making, and professors are being monitored for the topics they teach. No University Is an Island offers a comprehensive account of the social, political, and cultural forces undermining academic freedom. At once witty and devastating, it confronts these threats with exceptional frankness, then offers a prescription for higher education’s renewal. In an insider’s account of how the primary organization for faculty members nationwide has fought the culture wars, Cary Nelson, the current President of the American Association of University Professors, unveils struggles over governance and unionization and the increasing corporatization of higher education. Peppered throughout with previously unreported, and sometimes incendiary, higher education anecdotes, Nelson is at his flame-throwing best. will be the benchmark against which we measure the current definitive struggle for academic freedom. The book calls on higher education’s advocates of both the Left and the Right to temper conviction with tolerance and focus on higher education’s real injustices. Nelson demands we stop denying teachers, student workers, and other employees a living wage and basic rights. He urges unions to take up the larger cause of justice. And he challenges his own and other academic organizations to embrace greater democracy. With broad and crucial implications for the future, No University Is an Island will be the benchmark against which we measure the current definitive struggle for academic freedom.

The Future of Academic Freedom

The Future of Academic Freedom
Title The Future of Academic Freedom PDF eBook
Author Henry Reichman
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Total Pages 377
Release 2019-04-02
Genre Education
ISBN 142142858X

Download The Future of Academic Freedom Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The issues Reichman considers—which are the subjects of daily conversation on college and university campuses nationwide as well as in the media—will fascinate general readers, students, and scholars alike.

Press Freedom Under Siege

Press Freedom Under Siege
Title Press Freedom Under Siege PDF eBook
Author Ma. Ceres P. Doyo
Publisher
Total Pages 438
Release 2019
Genre Censorship
ISBN

Download Press Freedom Under Siege Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle