Marquette UniversityÌęmust immediately reinstate and pay damages to John McAdams, the political science lecturer whoÌęÌęon his personal blog over how she handled a classroom discussion that turned to gay marriage. So ruled the Wisconsin Supreme Court, overturning a lower courtâs determination that Marquette was within its rights to suspend Dr McAdams over the incident in 2014.
Wisconsinâs high court split along conservative and liberal lines in the case, votingÌęfour-to-two in favour of Dr McAdams. While the professorâs case was about an alleged breach of contract,ÌęÌętouched on the current campus speech climate, especially for political conservatives, such as Dr McAdams. It also broke with a long judicial traditionÌęof deferring to colleges and universities on tenured personnel matters.
Academic freedom âand concomitantly, free speech, is increasingly imperilled in America and within the microcosm of the college campusâ, Justice Rebecca Grassl Bradley wrote in concurring with the majority opinion.
Describing Dr McAdamsâ case as an âunprecedented dispute between a university and a professorâ in which âacademic freedom was put on trialâ, Justice Bradley said the question was whether that freedom would âsuccumb to the dominant academic culture of micro-aggressions, trigger warnings and safe spaces that seeks to silence unpopular speech by deceptively recasting it as violenceâ.
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In this âbattleâ, she said, âonly one could prevail, forÌęacademic freedom cannot coexist with Orwellian speech police. Academic freedom means nothing if faculty is forced to self-censor in fear of offending the unforeseen and ever-evolving sensitivities of adversaries demanding retribution.âÌę
The Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty, which represented Dr McAdams in the case, said in a statement that âacross the country, academic freedom is under assault on campuses.ÌęUniversities are treating academic freedom as the right to say only what administrators or the loudest factions on campus approve of.â
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Yet the Wisconsin court âstruck a major blow in favour of free speech, delivering the unequivocal message that âacademic freedomâ means just thatâ, the institute said.
Milwaukee-based Marquette said it will comply with the ruling but maintained that Dr McAdamsâ case isÌęnot, and never was, about academic freedom.
âA tenured professor put a graduate studentâs name and contact information on the internet so that people could go after her,â said Ralph Weber, a lawyer for the university. âThatâs not academic freedom, thatâs cyberbullying. Marquette, as a private, Catholic, Jesuit university, enforces codes of conduct, and cyberbullying violates those codes.â
Dr McAdams disagreed with that characterisation, saying he merely linked his blogÌęto the graduate studentâs now-defunct public web page (the student has since left the university for another programme). He said he intends to return to teaching at Marquette, but didnât say when.
Rick Esenberg, Dr McAdamsâ attorney, said that âcriticising someone is not cyberbullying. Disagreeing with someone âÌęeven sharply âÌęis not cyberbullying.ÌęThe Wisconsin Supreme Court explained that what Marquette is doing is holding [Dr McAdams] responsible for the actions of othersâ who later contacted the student.
The background to the case is that, in 2014, a Marquette undergraduateÌęÌęhe had with a graduate student instructor in philosophy. In the recording, the student complained to the instructor that she had, in his view, dismissed a secondÌęstudentâs comment about gay marriage duringÌęa class discussion on a separateÌęphilosophical issue. The instructor responded that the student didnât âhave the right, especially [in an ethics class], to make homophobic comments or racist commentsâ.
The first student shared his recording with Dr McAdams, who wrote about it in a post calledÌęÌęon hisÌęblog,ÌęMarquette Warrior,Ìęwhich has a wide following in conservative circles. Dr McAdams named the graduate student, who he did not otherwise know, linked to her blog and accused her of âusing a tactic typical among liberals nowâ. That is, âopinions with which they disagree are not merely wrong, and are not to be argued against on their merits, but are deemed âoffensiveâ and need to be shut upâ, he wrote.
In the âpolitically correct world of academia, one is supposed to assume that all victim groups think the same way as leftist professorsâ, Dr McAdams said in the post. While certain groups âhave the privilege of shutting up debateâ, he added, academe is aÌęâfree fire zone where straight white males are concernedâ.
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The student soon complained to Marquette that sheâd received hate mail as a result of the blog post and write-ups elsewhere. Marquette suspended Dr McAdams, pending a faculty review.
In 2016, a seven-professor panel recommended that Dr McAdams be suspended without pay for a period of up to two semesters âÌęnot for writing about the student, but for using her name and thus making her vulnerable to harassment.ÌęMichael Lovell, the university president, took the advisory faculty panelâs suggestion but went a step further, instructing Dr McAdams to write a letter of apology to the student, as well.
Dr McAdams refused, and the university moved to dismiss him.Ìę
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Around the same time, Dr McAdams sued Marquette, alleging breach of contract. He said that his terms of employment, as articulated in the faculty handbook and other university documents, indicated that he could be dismissed only with good cause and that tenure afforded him academic freedom. In suspending him indefinitely for extramural speech, he argued, Marquette was violating both contractual obligations.
A district court sided with Marquette in the suit last year, saying Dr McAdams erred in identifying the philosophy student by name and that the university was within its rights to punish him. That court afforded Marquette the special deference it argued it had in faculty matters, and that institutions typically enjoy in such cases, particularly at private colleges.
But Justice Daniel Kelly, in his Supreme Court opinion reversing that ruling, wrote that Marquetteâs disciplinary process was ânot a substitute for [Dr McAdamsâ] right to sueâ. He also called the lengthy faculty panel report a âdistractionâ from the issues at hand, since it was merely an advisory group to the president under university by-laws. AndÌęthe report was compromised anyway, he said, because a faculty member on the committee had publicly disparaged Dr McAdams over the blog post but continued to serve on the committee.
In any case, Justice Kelly disagreed with the faculty and administrative finding that Dr McAdamsâ post was not protected by academic freedom in its entirety.
âWe conclude that McAdamsâ blog post qualifies asÌęan extramural comment protected by the doctrine of academic freedom,â he wrote. âThe post is incapable of clearly demonstrating McAdams is unfit to serve as a professor because, although the university identified many aspects of the blog post about which it was concerned, it did not identify any particular way in which the blog post violated McAdamsâ responsibilities to the institutionâs students.â
Justice Ann Walsh Bradley wrote in her dissent that at its core, academic freedom is a âprofessional principle, not merely a legal constructâ, which âembraces the academic freedom of the faculty as well as the academic freedom of the institutionâ. The majority opinion looked only at academic freedom from Dr McAdamsâ perspective, she said, ignoring the shared governance aspect ofÌęacademic freedom, and theÌęfact that a faculty panel had approved of his suspension.
Moreover, Justice Bradley argued, the majority did not mention key facts surrounding the case, such as that McAdams actively promoted his blog post criticising the student to news media, includingÌęInside Higher Ed.
Mr Weber, Marquetteâs lawyer, said that the university will work with its faculty to makeÌęclearer going forward that deference should be given to institutional decision-making.ÌęYet he said that the decision has serious implications for institutions beyond Marquette.
âThe faculty hearing committee were people from across the university âÌędentistry, law, engineering professors âÌęwho found, unanimously, that what was done here crossed the line, âthis is beyond what a Marquette professorÌęcan doâ,â Mr Weber said. âAnd yet you have a court saying, âweâre better equipped to make that judgement of professional conduct.ââ
Mr Weber also highlighted the dissentâs notes that Dr McAdams had not only promoted the blog but also threatened administrators involved in his disciplinary process that he would write about them on it. So the question ofÌęwhether the incident reflects on his professional fitness is determined by how one looks at it, he said. âIf you look within the four corners of the blog post, youâre not seeing the full picture,â he said.Ìę
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education applauded the courtâs decision.Ìę
âAdministrators cannot simply decide that they do not like the results of certain faculty speech, and then work backwards to find a justification for firing them,â Ari Cohn, director of the groupâs Individual Rights Defense Program, said in a statement.ÌęâThe courtâs decision recognised that allowing a university to do so is incompatible with any meaningful understanding of academic freedom. Colleges and universities across the country that are facing calls to discipline faculty members for their online speech should pay attention.â
This is an edited version of a storyÌęthatÌę.
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