Should students be given âtrigger warningsâ about discussions and texts that may offend them and âintellectual safe spacesâ on campus?
That was the key question for panellists taking part in a debate at a London Thinks event held at Conway Hall on 10 September.
Pam Lowe, senior lecturer in sociology at Aston University, stressed that âeverything is discussed in the classroom. Nothing is bannedâ. Yet since her research indicated that âstudents want to discuss difficult issues in class" but also want to be warned about them in advance, she tried to create âsafe spacesâ for them.
However, she said the university did not have the same responsibility for other events on campus.
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In the Islamic Society, for example, âmen and women often sit on different sides of the room even though there is no sign telling them to do so. Who am I to say they have to mix themselves up?â
Meanwhile, writer and activist Beatrix Campbell was distressed by the way that Rupert Read, lecturer in philosophy at the University of East Anglia (and a Green Party candidate at the last general election), had been fiercely attacked for his âwrong viewsâ after writing âa philosophical rumination on transgender issuesâ.
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Feminist campaigner Julia Bindel had similarly been âpunished" by an NUS no-platform ban "repeated year in and year outâ for her own views on the topic. Such censoriousness risked undermining âthe feminist goal of challenging all questions of genderâ, said Ms Campbell.
Discussion also touched on the banning of "laddishâ comedian Dapper Laughs by Cardiff University and the cancellation of a gig by feminist comedian Kate Smurthwaite at Goldsmiths, University of London, after concerns that her views on prostitution might breach the universityâs âsafe space policyâ targeting âoppressive behaviourâ.
It was left to Brendan OâNeill, editor of Spiked Online magazine, to take an extreme free-speech position (even extending to the right of people to publish paedophile fantasies).
âOnce youâve accepted a âno platform policyâ,â he argued, âyouâve already conceded the principleâ. Concerns about âIslamophobiaâ could easily lead to âthe pathologisation of legitimate moral viewpointsâ.
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âWe are here to talk about free speech,â Mr OâNeill challenged his fellow panellists. âDo you accept the right of a rugby club to issue a leaflet using the word âmingersâ?â He was greeted by a cry from the floor: âI support free speech, but not you!â
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