Faculty Freedom of Speech Where Do We Draw the Line? – National Review

Posted: February 21, 2022 at 5:50 pm

College and university faulty members need a considerable measure of academic freedom to teach, and those employed at public institutions are covered by the First Amendment. That doesnt mean, however, that there can be no limits on what they say or write.

In todays Martin Center article, Jay Schalin ponders the problem of drawing the line.

Schalin writes, In theliterature of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), the largest and most established faculty professional association, the only line faculty cannot cross if they wish to maintain their academic freedom protection is to demonstrate a lack of fitness to be a professor: The controlling principle is that a faculty members expression of opinion as a citizen cannot constitute grounds for dismissal unless it clearly demonstrates the faculty members unfitness for his or her position.

But, he observes, fitness is a rather vague notion. In the hotly debated case several years ago, a professor who had been offered a position at the University of Illinois was rejected before the contract was finalized on the grounds that his tweets regarding Israel were too inflammatory for the school. Was it wrong for Illinois to have turned him down?

Or what about the case of Allyn Walker, the Old Dominion sociology professor who last year wrote in favor of destigmatizing pedophilia. She was forced to resign as a result of her comments. Should she have been?

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Faculty Freedom of Speech Where Do We Draw the Line? - National Review

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