âNo platformingâ, hate speech, bigotry and the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel have all come under searching scrutiny at a conference organised by Spiked online magazine.
Opening the first session at the event, held in central Londonâs Conway Hall on 17 February, deputy editor Tom Slater pointed to âan explosion of censorship on campusâ, with âthe bar [for offence] getting lower and lowerâ, so that âeven donning a sombrero can get you into trouble. Now, being intellectually and emotionally comfortable is paramount [for students].â
The controversy about protesters trying to prevent Germaine Greer speaking at Cardiff University, claimed freelance writer Abi Wilkinson, was âan enormous storm in a teacupâ. In reality, attempts to âno-platformâ controversial speakers tended to âstart up debate rather than shutting it down â because of the backlash, media reaction and comments on Twitter. Studentsâ union officers canât stop students hearing certain views.â
For Spiked staff writer Ella Whelan, âsafe spaces stifle debate by their very natureâŠCampuses are not private membersâ clubs and shouldnât be â they are part of public life.â There was little danger that allowing offensive views on campus would âturn the entire student body to the BNP [British National Party]â.
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âIf you feel safe on campus,â Ms Whelan suggested to students, âyouâre doing something wrong.â The only thing that safe spaces deserved was âa two-finger saluteâ.
Barnaby Raine, a student at the University of Oxford who serves on the executive council of the National Union of Students, spoke in favour of BDS and referred to Israelâs âdeliberate perpetuation of injustice along ethnic linesâ, which inevitably had an impact on the academic freedom of Palestinians.
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Sai Englert, lecturer in development studies at Soas, University of London, also said that BDS was justified on the grounds that he cared more about influencing âstructures and political processesâ than the free circulation of ideas, and that Palestinian civil society had called for a boycott.
Yet Joanna Williams, education editor at Spiked (who also teaches at the University of Kent), described the BDS movement as a âcensoriousâŠcampaign to promote freedom by calling for censorshipâ that made âjudgements, based on nationality or viewpoint, on who can speakâ.
It was âbigotedâ in its focus on the sins of a single country and also âtrivialise[d] research in the humanities, which were seen as taken over by political campaigningâ. Academics were setting a terrible example to their students in wanting to âshut down and censor rather than engageâ.
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