Tools
Change country:

Student protests are testing US colleges’ commitment to free speech

Students at a pro-Palestinian college encampment. Columbia University students participate in an ongoing pro-Palestinian encampment on their campus following last week’s arrest of more than 100 protesters, on April 25, 2024 in New York City. | Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

The crackdown on protesters at Columbia and elsewhere lays bare the challenge of balancing academic freedom with student safety.

Student protests are heating up around the country, just as the school year is winding down.

At Columbia University in New York, a deadline is nearing for the administration to clear the student encampment off the campus lawn. The NYPD chief of patrol defended his department’s actions earlier this week in arresting over 100 student protesters on campus, writing “Columbia decided to hold its students accountable to the laws of the school. They are seeing the consequences of their actions. Something these kids were most likely never taught,” in a post on X.

But the root of all the arrests and protests at Columbia is, arguably, free speech. In testimony before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce in Washington, DC, last week, Columbia President Minouche Shafik struggled to walk a line between ensuring student safety and protecting academic freedom. “We believe that Columbia’s role is not to shield individuals from positions that they find unwelcome,” she said, “but instead to create an environment where different viewpoints can be tested and challenged.”

In light of the fierce debate over campus speech and student safety, Today, Explained reached out to the president of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) Irene Mulvey to get her view on the state of free speech on college campuses. AAUP is a nonprofit organization comprising faculty and other professionals in academia whose stated mission is to protect academic freedom and support higher education as a public good. Mulvey shared her insights into whether Columbia and other institutions where crackdowns of protests are happening are living up to those ideals.

This conversation has been edited for length and clarity. —Miranda Kennedy

Sean Rameswaram

Has protecting academic freedom and supporting higher education become more difficult since October 7?

Irene Mulvey

Yes, it has become more difficult since October 7. Although I would say our job of protecting academic freedom and protecting higher education from outside interference has always been difficult. There’s always been political interference into higher education, and that’s why we were founded. In the past, the interference into higher education has been targeting individual professors, you know, a wealthy donor doesn’t like somebody’s research and they want to get them fired. Or somebody speaks up at a faculty meeting, criticizing the administration and the administration doesn’t want them to get tenure.

What we’re seeing now is an escalation in that the entire enterprise of higher education as a public good in a democracy is being attacked. We’re seeing attacks at the state level with legislation that will censor content — we call these educational gag orders, where there’s legislation that says what can be taught in a college classroom. That’s just outright censorship and the kind of thing you see in an authoritarian society, not a democracy.

The House Committee on Education and the Workforce has dragged these presidents in front of the committee for a performative witch hunt of a hearing. And that is an escalation because those are private institutions. So it’s a remarkable escalation for the federal government to be intruding into what’s happening at private colleges.

To think about how professors are feeling about these protests, we need to think about how professors feel about higher education. And what professors are thinking [is] that in higher education, we should have a robust exchange of ideas in which no idea is withheld from scrutiny or debate.

Our students have very strong feelings about what’s happening in the Middle East. They are attempting to have that robust exchange of ideas about what’s happening. And I think as faculty members, we support that. Students on a campus, the students are learning from professors. They’re learning how to conduct research on their own. They’re learning how to analyze arguments. They’re learning how to think critically about complex matters.

And they have thoughts about what’s happening in the world [and] on their campuses, with regard to what their campuses are doing to support what’s happening in the Middle East. Faculty members are supportive of this. This is what academic freedom means.

Sean Rameswaram

So it sounds like you don’t support the president of Columbia University calling in the NYPD to make arrests at a peaceful protest.

Irene Mulvey

That’s an understatement. I think what the Columbia president did was the most disproportionate reaction that I’ve ever seen. My understanding is these were peaceful protesters on an outdoor lawn on a campus where they pay a lot of money to attend, and she had them deemed as trespassers and invoked a statute where she has to argue that they are a clear and present danger to the functioning of the institution in order to allow the NYPD on campus.

The most important thing is her response is doing the opposite of what’s supposed to happen on a campus. Her response silenced the voices of the students. Her response suppressed the speech and suppressed the debate. It’s the absolute opposite of what should happen on a college campus, and it was extremely disappointing.

Sean Rameswaram

If you had been in her position as the president of Columbia, and you were dealing with these protests and people [are] saying they feel unsafe, that there’s antisemitic slogans, that there was a protest outside where a Jewish student was told to go back to Poland, how would you have navigated these competing forces?

Irene Mulvey

Yeah, well, it’s not easy. Let’s be clear, there’s no easy answer to what’s going on here. But the principle behind anyone’s response should be education, should be speech, should be debate, should be ideas being put up for justification. And, you know, there could be some kind of forum for the students.

Of course, they have to protect the safety of all students. But if the way you’re choosing to keep students safe is by suppressing somebody else’s speech, that’s a false choice. You don’t have to suppress speech to keep students safe. I agree that these are difficult situations. And I know all of these campuses where these things are happening — Columbia, NYU, Yale — these campuses and these presidents will espouse academic freedom and free speech at the drop of a hat. But if you’re not standing up for those principles at times like these, then those words are completely meaningless.

Sean Rameswaram

It’s interesting because I think what we’re seeing here is the clearest evidence that we haven’t quite figured out where the line is on protecting students versus free speech versus the open discussion of ideas. I think the president of Columbia, Minouche Shafik, made that point in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, that universities haven’t figured this out. The Supreme Court hasn’t figured this out, and it shouldn’t be on universities to figure this out.

Do you have some idea of where the line is between the open academic discussion of ideas and something that could be dangerous for students and thus not permitted?

Irene Mulvey

The way to think about it is in situations like this where there are polarized views, there are really strong feelings for very good reasons. Not all the speech is going to make you comfortable. Academic freedom and free speech can be messy. And so I think you have to err on the side of allowing the speech and allowing the debate and allowing the discussion. When it veers into something that doesn’t feel good, then someone should speak up and say that. But silencing voices because you don’t like what they’re saying is a very dangerous, slippery slope that we do not want to get onto.

Sean Rameswaram

One thing I’ve found heartening following these protests on college campuses for six months is that they’ve mostly been peaceful. Now, that being said, if I’m a Jewish student walking across campus and someone says, “Go back to Poland!” I might start to feel unsafe. If I’m a Muslim student and someone’s doxxing me because of my attending a protest, I might start to feel unsafe. How do college administrators navigate safety, which feels sort of amorphous sometimes, in a free-speech environment?

Irene Mulvey

Administrations — universities — have an obligation to address issues of harassment and hate speech through their policies that have been in place for decades. Because hate speech didn’t just arrive on campus since October 7. We’ve had to address issues like this for decades. So campuses have policies to address issues like that, and their obligation is to keep the campus safe.

For the most part, I feel the protests that I’ve seen have been peaceful. But again, it’s a messy situation. The important way to handle it is to stand back on principles of academic freedom, free speech, and keeping the campus safe, and addressing issues of hate speech through policies that are developed with the faculty.

Sean Rameswaram

You were a professor of mathematics for 40 years — for four decades. I imagine before that, maybe you were a student at a college protest, trying to voice your opinion and embracing free speech. Do you think with all the perspective that you have that this is just a rough patch that we get over and we’re stronger because of it? Or do you think we’re really going to get bogged down here?

Irene Mulvey

Oh, that’s a good question. I did participate in protests as a student during the Vietnam War. I was in high school. But this is definitely a rough patch. And where we come out on the end of it is an open question.

I think what’s happening is part of an agenda to control what happens on campus, not just about the history and policies of Israel. What’s happening now is part of a larger movement, the anti-DEI movement, the anti-CRT movement, which is intended to censor or control what can be learned in a college classroom and what can be taught on campus. I think that’s the real danger, that broader movement, which I think would really damage higher education and the role it’s supposed to play in a democracy — to be a check and balance on politics.

Be sure to followToday, Explained on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pandora, or wherever you listen to podcasts.


Read full article on: vox.com
Arizona AG confirms Rudy Giuliani served in elections case amid former Trump associate's 80th birthday party
Rudy Giuliani, a former associated of former President Donald Trump, became the final defendant served indictment among 18 charged in Arizona elections case.
foxnews.com
Stefanik to rebuke Biden and praise Trump in address to Israeli parliament
GOP Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York excoriated Biden over a paused weapons shipment to Israel in her address to the Knesset.
cbsnews.com
Meerkats Keep Dropping Dead From Heart Failure
At the start of the spring of 2015, Jeffrey, a three-year-old meerkat, was happily eating, tussling with his brothers, and surveying zoo patrons from his usual perch, his forepaws gathered and his black-tipped snout aloft. But one day in April, his caretakers discovered him in his enclosure, so weak that he could barely lift his head. By the time h
theatlantic.com
Suspect arrested after woman at Clark College stabbed in neck
Salvador Aguilar, 31, was arrested in connection with the stabbing of a woman in her neck on the Clark College campus in Washington state last week.
foxnews.com
How Drake Became White
We’d gathered that day at the cafeteria’s “Black” table, cracking jokes and philosophizing during the free period that was our perk as upperclassmen. We came in different shades: bone white, tan and brownish, dark as a silhouette. One of my classmates, who fancied himself a lyricist, was insisting that Redman, a witty emcee from nearby Newark, New
theatlantic.com
Fairfax's McRae siblings keep trying to one-up each other, all the way to Dartmouth
Romello McRae will graduate this spring from Fairfax High and join high-achieving brother Robert and sister Elyjah at the Ivy League school.
latimes.com
Man in Disbelief After Using Radiation Detector in His Kitchen
The Redditor is fascinated by the reading, and so far he has no plans to change his kitchen counters or move.
newsweek.com
Great-Power Politics Is Ruining the Olympics
In 2021, on the eve of the Tokyo Olympics, 23 top Chinese swimmers tested positive for the drug trimetazidine. In its proper clinical setting, the medication is used to treat angina. But for an athlete or a coach willing to cheat, it is a performance-enhancing drug, boosting the heart muscle’s functioning. Nonprescription use of trimetazidine, or T
theatlantic.com
100-hour weeks and heart palpitations: Inside Wall Street’s brutal work culture
The tragic deaths of two Bank of America employees has become a flashpoint for anger over allegedly unrealistic work expectations on Wall Street.
nypost.com
An airstrike kills 20 in central Gaza as Israel's leaders air wartime divisions
An Israeli airstrike killed 20 people in central Gaza, mostly women and children, on Sunday, as fighting raged and Israel's leaders aired divisions over who should govern Gaza after the war.
npr.org
Smellmaxxing, Explained
Some teenage boys have grown obsessed with designer fragrances that cost hundreds of dollars.
nytimes.com
Would you eat this weird sandwich? Barry Enderwick would.
Barry Enderwick’s hobby is recreating historical sandwich recipes. Since 2018, he has created and eaten more than 700 sandwiches and posted results on TikTok.
washingtonpost.com
Biden to deliver Morehouse commencement address as protests disrupt graduations across the country
President Biden will deliver the commencement address at Morehouse College on Sunday, marking an opportunity to reach out to Black voters.
foxnews.com
Americans are down on the economy (again), with inflation topping election concerns
After a spurt of optimism, Americans are feeling a little more glum about the economy — again.
washingtonpost.com
Bronny James is ready to be himself, but the NBA still sees LeBron James Jr.
Scouts and executives see Bronny James as a viable NBA player and confirm he could be leverage to force the Lakers into a trade to unite him with his father.
latimes.com
Lakers and JJ Redick are a match made in Looney Tunes
JJ Redick could be the next Lakers head coach because he has a podcast with LeBron James. Period. End of resume. That's a joke, right?
latimes.com
Sam Alito’s flag flew upside down. Are his ethics?
Justice Alito’s wife hoisted a “Stop the Steal” flag after Jan 6. Should her husband recuse himself now?
washingtonpost.com
Wild Reason Student Reschedules Meeting Gets '10/10' From Professor
On her way to meet her professor, Annie Rogovin got sidetracked when she noticed a baby duck.
newsweek.com
Putin's 'Revenge': Georgia's Jailed Ex-President Urges West to Act
Mikheil Saakashvili told Newsweek that Moscow "has everything to gain" from Georgia passing its controversial "foreign agent" law.
newsweek.com
How Meghan Markle's Wedding Dress Was an Act of Royal Rebellion
Meghan's haute-couture Givenchy wedding gown for the 2018 ceremony broke a long-established royal tradition.
newsweek.com
Inside look at some of Knicks’ other memorable Game 7s
Sunday’s Game 7 against the Pacers will mark the Knicks’ first since 2000. The Post takes a look at some of their most memorable Game 7s:
nypost.com
A Much-Needed History of Queer Women’s Spaces
slate.com
A Compelling Made-For-TV Reality Season
This is an edition of The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here.Welcome back to The Daily’s Sunday culture edition, in which one Atlantic writer or editor reveals what’s keeping them entertained. Today’s special guest
theatlantic.com
The General Intendant’s Daughter
The girl’s expressive gifts surpass those of all the members of his company, even the aging starlet Klamt. That is something the General Intendant of the City Theater can no longer deny.Up to this point, he has done everything in his power to keep his daughter off the stage, for the General Intendant is intimately acquainted with the unscrupulousne
theatlantic.com
Is it ever okay to film strangers in public?
Getty Images Nobody wants to be filmed without their knowledge. Why does it make up so much of the content we watch? The experience of realizing you are being surreptitiously filmed by a stranger is now a relatively common one, but this is how it happened for Mitchell Clark: The 25-year-old was working a shift at his Atlanta Target when someone pr
vox.com
Ukraine’s Oleksandr Usyk Becomes World’s Undisputed Heavyweight Champion
The Ukrainian boxer Oleksandr Usyk became the world’s undisputed heavyweight champion on Sunday. The victory has lifted morale in a country struggling to contain Russian advances on the battlefield.
nytimes.com
Premier League predictions: Arsenal vs. Everton, Manchester City vs. West Ham picks
All 10 matches this weekend will kick off at 11 a.m. Sunday, but the focus will be on two: Arsenal vs. Everton and Manchester City vs. West Ham United. 
nypost.com
Ukraine Follows Russia's Playbook in Mobilizing Convicts
Prisoners can now be drafted into the war effort after new laws were signed on Friday.
newsweek.com
Airstrike kills 20 in central Gaza; fighting rages as Israel’s leaders air wartime divisions
An Israeli airstrike killed 20 people in central Gaza, mostly women and children, and fighting raged across the north on Sunday as Israel's leaders aired divisions over who should govern Gaza after the war, now in its eighth month.
nypost.com
2 dead and 5 missing after a boat collision on the Danube River in Hungary
Police say two people have died and five are missing following a boat collision on the Danube River in Hungary
abcnews.go.com
Donald Trump Teases Vice President Pick in 'SNL' Sketch
The show's cold open saw the former president, played by James Austin Johnson, speaking at the barricades of a Manhattan courthouse
newsweek.com
Letters to the Editor: Opposing views on L.A. County's 'Jane Fonda Day' and the Vietnam War
It's time for the vocal Vietnamese ex-pat community in Orange County to move, says one reader. Another accuses Jane Fonda of profoundly betraying the U.S.
latimes.com
Central Park’s party-pooper rules baffle New Yorkers — with bubbles, balloons and ‘active sports’ off limits for celebrations
Bubbles, balloons, tables and chairs and even tug-of-war are off limits for celebrations held in Central Park, The Post has learned.
nypost.com
Surging auto insurance rates squeeze drivers, fuel inflation
Relentlessly rising auto insurance rates are squeezing car owners and stoking inflation. Auto insurance rates rose 2.6% in March and are up 22% from a year ago.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: A two-state solution requires Palestinians and Israelis to ignore their extremists
Israel has the right to exist and defend itself, and the Palestinians have legitimate grievances. Settling this dispute requires imperfect solutions.
latimes.com
Boston Dynamics' creepy robotic canine dances in sparkly blue costume
Robotic dogs performed a dance routine and kissed, igniting discussion about the potential applications of this technology at entertainment venues like theme parks.
foxnews.com
She vanished in 1968. This year her family finally learned what happened.
The body found on a Florida beach in 1985 had been slain, but police didn’t know the victim’s name until DNA testing uncovered that she was a Virginia woman who vanished in 1968.
washingtonpost.com
California's first Black land trust fights climate change, makes the outdoors more inclusive
The 40 Acres Conservation League is on a mission to establish an open space where Black Californians and other people of color can feel at home in nature.
latimes.com
Letters to the Editor: Joe Biden needs to go lower to beat Donald Trump
Michelle Obama said not to, but "going low" has paid dividends for Trump. Biden needs to respond in kind.
latimes.com
Academy Museum took heat for ignoring Hollywood's Jewish history. A new exhibition aims to fix that
The Academy Museum's exhibition 'Hollywoodland: Jewish Founders and the Making of a Movie Capital' centers on Jewish filmmakers who created the studio system.
latimes.com
As Trump’s trial nears its end, Judge Merchan faces critical decisions
The New York Supreme Court justice has stayed calm amid tense courtroom battles in Donald Trump’s hush money trial and public attacks by Trump and his allies.
washingtonpost.com
Don't cancel those summer plans yet. Who knows if the presidential debates will come off
Two prospective Biden-Trump debates came together quickly after Biden issued a challenge and Trump accepted. But there are still a lot of details to be worked out and either could walk away.
latimes.com
D.C.-area forecast: Drier today with just a spotty shower. Warming into the 80s by midweek.
As weekend days go around here lately, this one isn’t terrible.
washingtonpost.com
Newsom leaves the Vatican with pope's praise for refusing to impose the death penalty
When they spoke at the Vatican, Pope Francis praised California Gov. Gavin Newsom's decision to temporarily end the death penalty.
latimes.com
Editorial: California blew it on bail reform. Now Illinois is showing it works
California got cold feet on bail reform as voters rejected a groundbreaking program to eliminate money from pretrial release decisions. Now Illinois shows it can work.
latimes.com
Opinion: Wait times go down. Patient satisfaction goes up. What's the matter with letting apps and AI run the ER?
In ERs now, you'll get a tech-driven evaluation. But trading doctors' humanity and deductive powers for AI and apps has a high cost — dumbed-down medicine.
latimes.com
Money Talk: Newlyweds wonder if it's the time to buy a home
A newlywed couple wrestles with whether they should jump into the housing market, while a diligent payer of bills endures a saga over a missed payment.
latimes.com
At a Cannes Film Festival of big swings and faceplants, real life takes a back seat
New movies from Andrea Arnold, Yorgos Lanthimos, Paul Schrader and Zambia's Rungano Nyoni strayed from expectations, scraping at the feel and texture of dreams.
latimes.com