A team of writers and campaigners have put the case for more offensive speech in the academy.
In his introduction to Unsafe Space: The Crisis of Free Speech on Campus, Tom Slater â deputy editor of online magazine spiked and coordinator of its â looks back to the 1960s Free Speech Movement at the University of California, when âstudents demanded to be taken seriously as autonomous beings, capable of negotiating their academic, political and social lives away from the tutelage of their tweeded mindersâ.
Today, by contrast, argues Mr Slater, universities âcensor anything that might make students âfeel uncomfortableââ, from feminists to fascists, when they should be âplaces for thinking the unthinkable and saying the unsayableâ.
Contributors then spell out the threats to free speech posed by âtrigger warningsâ, the abortion debate, the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel, and concerns about âlad cultureâ.
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Peter Wood, president of the National Association of Scholars in the US, savages claims that a âliberal obsessionâ with âacademic freedomâ needs to be replaced with a concern for âacademic justiceâ. In the case of what he calls the âEstablished Church of Climate Catastropheâ and their âferocious attacks on climate scepticsâ, he sees both âthe new spirit of enforced conformity in the name of social justiceâ and âthe new fanaticism centred on a belief in an eco-apocalypseâ.
In a chapter of his own, Mr Slater criticises the UK governmentâs Prevent agenda, on the grounds that we need âIslamist ideasâŠto be debated and demolishedâ. Yet the universities and student bodies âdecrying state censorshipâ can never make it a matter of principle because they have been âcarrying out their own censorship on an industrial scaleâ â against, for example, âNo Platformed inflammatory politicians, âtransphobicâ feminists and un-PC comediansâ.
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Prime minister David Cameron has said that âyou donât have to support violence to subscribe to certain intolerant ideas which create a climate in which extremists can flourishâ. Mr Slater detects âthe same alarmist sentiment with different prejudices attachedâ in the view of many studentsâ unions that âhypersexualised, laddish expression constitutes a ârape cultureâ that affirms ârape-supportive attitudesâ and can lead men to commit heinous actsâ.
He ends the book with a call to arms: âThe debate is never overâŠHistory is full of people getting things wrong. Let your opponents speak â maybe youâll learn something.â
Unsafe Space: The Crisis of Free Speech on Campus, edited by Tom Slater, will be published shortly by Palgrave Macmillan and is already available as an e-book.
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