{"id":262518,"date":"2024-05-20T12:00:02","date_gmt":"2024-05-20T11:00:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/?p=262518"},"modified":"2024-07-02T08:49:24","modified_gmt":"2024-07-02T07:49:24","slug":"if-we-say-yes-on-open-letters-and-campus-protests","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/2024\/05\/if-we-say-yes-on-open-letters-and-campus-protests\/","title":{"rendered":"If We Say Yes: On Open Letters and Campus Protests"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em>23 May 2024 Issue <\/em>&#8211; <span class=\"smallcapslede smallcapslede-spaced lrb-t-cac\">An open letter<\/span>\u200b is an unloved thing. Written by committee and in haste, it is a monument to compromise: a minimal statement to which all signatories can agree, or \u2013 worse \u2013 a maximal statement that no signatory fully believes. Some academics have a general policy against signing them. I discovered that was true of some of my Oxford colleagues last year, when I drafted and circulated an open letter condemning Israel\u2019s attack on Gaza and calling for a ceasefire. Some, like those who are in precarious employment or whose immigration status isn\u2019t settled, have good reasons for adopting such a policy. Others understandably don\u2019t want to put their name to something that doesn\u2019t perfectly represent their views, especially when it might be read as a declaration of faith. I always cringe at the self-importance of the genre: though open letters can sometimes exert influence, stiffly worded exhortations hardly suffice to stop states, militaries, bombs. And yet, a \u2018no open letters\u2019 policy can serve as a convenient excuse when one is hesitant to stand up for one\u2019s political principles.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">In the last seven months, there have been many more open letters on Gaza. I have signed some of them. One, in November, was a reply to a statement published by a group of prominent German intellectuals, J\u00fcrgen Habermas among them, who had lambasted anyone who accused Israel of flirting with genocide. \u2018Despite all the concern for the fate of the Palestinian population,\u2019 the statement read, \u2018the standards of judgment slip completely when genocidal intentions are attributed to Israel\u2019s actions.\u2019 It went on to suggest that attributions of genocidal intent were an expression of antisemitism. The response, which I signed along with Adam Tooze, Samuel Moyn, Chandra Talpade Mohanty and others, condemned Hamas\u2019s actions of 7 October and affirmed the \u2018vital need to protect Jewish life in Germany in the face of rising antisemitism\u2019. It insisted that we must not \u2018close down the space for debate and reflection about the possibility of genocide\u2019, while noting that not all the signatories believed that Israel\u2019s actions constituted genocide. This even-handedness did not stop an editor at the <em class=\"emphasisClass\">Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung<\/em> from declaring, with our letter in mind, that Jews have an \u2018enemy\u2019 at universities.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">In April, the critical theorist Nancy Fraser, who had also signed the letter criticising the statement by Habermas et al, had an invitation to visit the University of Cologne as its Albertus Magnus Professor rescinded. Cologne justified the disinvitation on the grounds that Fraser had signed yet another letter, \u2018Philosophy for Palestine\u2019, which questioned \u2018Israel\u2019s right to exist as an \u201cethno-supremacist state\u201d\u2019, and called for an academic and cultural boycott of Israeli institutions \u2013 a call that Cologne said was \u2018irreconcilable\u2019 with its \u2018close ties to Israeli partner institutions\u2019. Fraser, herself Jewish, described her cancellation as an instance of \u2018philosemitic McCarthyism\u2019 \u2013 \u2018a way to silence people under the pretext of supposedly supporting Jews\u2019.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Also last month I signed a petition, launched by the political theorist Enzo Rossi, protesting against the suspension of Jodi Dean, a professor of politics at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, from her academic duties. In a blog post, Dean \u2013 a communist and anti-Zionist \u2013 had remarked of the early scenes from 7 October:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Who could not feel energised seeing oppressed people bulldozing the fences enclosing them, taking to the skies in escape, and flying freely through the air? The shattering of the collective sense of the possible made it seem as if anyone could be free, as if imperialism, occupation and oppression can and will be overthrown.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"leftranged lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Four days later, Mark D. Gearan, president of Hobart and William Smith, announced that Dean was being suspended from teaching pending an investigation. \u2018As a result of Professor Dean\u2019s comments,\u2019 he explained, \u2018there now may be students on our campus who feel threatened in or outside of the classroom.\u2019 An email, with the subject line \u2018Invitation to Participate in Investigation\u2019, has been sent to Hobart and William Smith students by a law firm retained by the college \u2018to conduct an independent investigation into whether Professor Jodi Dean has violated policies or standards of the Colleges prohibiting harassment and discrimination\u2019. The email asks students to contact the investigative team directly \u2018should you have any information that is relevant to our investigation\u2019.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">On 15 April students at Columbia University and Barnard College set up a Gaza solidarity encampment on a university lawn, just hours before Columbia\u2019s president, Minouche Shafik, was hauled in front of Congress to answer questions about the way her administration was dealing with the \u2018rising antisemitism on campus\u2019. The next day, Shafik authorised the <span class=\"caps\">NYPD<\/span>\u2019s Strategic Response Group to enter Columbia\u2019s campus. They did so, in full riot gear, and arrested more than a hundred student protesters. The police reported that the students they arrested \u2018were peaceful, offered no resistance whatsoever\u2019. Visiting the Columbia campus the following week, the speaker of the House of Representatives, Mike Johnson, suggested the National Guard be brought in to deal with the students, whom he called \u2018lawless agitators and radicals\u2019. With their encampment dismantled, the students built another on a different lawn, and occupied a university building; mass arrests again followed. One Columbia professor commented: \u2018When I saw that police \u201ctank\u201d coming up the street, something in my heart broke. I stood and sobbed. The trustees had broken their compact with the university and I do not know it will come back.\u2019 On 22 April, more than a hundred Columbia faculty members held a rally to protest against the arrests and suspensions of their students. The day before, I had signed an open letter \u2013 along with three thousand other academics from around the world \u2013 that pledges us to uphold \u2018an academic and cultural boycott of Columbia University\u2019.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">While Columbia was not the first university to call the cops on its students during the current wave of protests, its heavy-handed intervention galvanised students across the <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span> and abroad, and set the template for their protests: the solidarity encampment. More than two thousand students in the <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span> have been arrested, from Yale and <span class=\"caps\">NYU<\/span> to the University of Northern Carolina, Emory (Georgia), Vanderbilt (Tennessee) and Pomona (California). At <span class=\"caps\">SUNY<\/span> Purchase, a public liberal arts college in upstate New York, students gathered, without tents, on campus to protest; when the college\u2019s \u2018quiet hours\u2019 began at 10 p.m., the students sat down and fell silent. The cops came in anyway and arrested seventy people, including faculty observers and students who had tried to flee the protest after the police ordered them to disperse. At Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, police body-slammed a Jewish labour historian in her mid-sixties. At Emory an economics professor was wrestled to the ground by the police for objecting to their manhandling of a student; she was charged with battery for \u2018resisting\u2019 arrest. At the Universities of Ohio and Indiana snipers were stationed on rooftops. At <span class=\"caps\">UCLA<\/span>, pro-Israel counter-protesters attacked the Gaza encampment for hours with sticks, traffic cones, bear spray and fireworks as police and campus security stood by; the following night, riot police attacked the encampment with rubber bullets and bean bag rounds. Such actions are not confined to the <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span>. Early in May, at the University of Amsterdam, masked far-right activists attacked the Gaza solidarity encampment with flares just a few hours after it was set up, while the police looked on. That night, riot police dismantled the camp with bulldozers, knocking one protester unconscious and injuring several others.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp has-dropcap\"><span class=\"dropcaps dropcap--i\">I<\/span><span class=\"smallcapslede smallcapslede-spaced lrb-t-cac\">n April<\/span>\u200b I was asked to sign a letter opposing the University of Cambridge\u2019s investigation into Nathan Cofnas, a Leverhulme early career fellow in philosophy. A self-described \u2018race realist\u2019, Cofnas has written widely in defence of abhorrently racist \u2013 particularly anti-Black \u2013 views, invoking what he claims are the findings of the science of heredity. In 2022, when he was first appointed, Cambridge students protested, to no effect. Student calls for his dismissal started up again this year, after Cofnas published a blog post in which he claimed that in a meritocracy the number of Black professors at Harvard would \u2018approach zero per cent\u2019 and Black people would \u2018disappear from almost all high-profile positions outside of sports and entertainment\u2019. At a protest outside the Cambridge philosophy faculty, students chanted \u2018Fire Nathan Cofnas\u2019; a student petition calling for his dismissal has more than a thousand signatures. This time, Cambridge has responded. On 5 April, Emmanuel College wrote to terminate Cofnas\u2019s research affiliation, explaining that his blog post \u2018amounted to, or could reasonably be construed as amounting to, a rejection of Diversity, Equality and Inclusion (<span class=\"caps\">DEI<\/span> and <span class=\"caps\">EDI<\/span>) policies\u2019. Cambridge\u2019s philosophy faculty and the Leverhulme Trust are both investigating Cofnas; his employment status presumably hangs in the balance.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">There were things about the letter, which I had no part in drafting, that I did not like. It did not contain a condemnation of Cofnas\u2019s racism, noting only that signing the letter \u2018does not indicate endorsement of Dr Cofnas\u2019s views\u2019. It did not draw a distinction between supporting Cofnas and objecting to Cambridge\u2019s investigation of him. It did not note that academic freedom isn\u2019t the same thing as free speech: that the former is about academics\u2019 rights to make content-based discriminations in speech based on their disciplinary expertise, while the latter is about everyone\u2019s right to be free of content-based speech restrictions in the public sphere. (It may well be that Cofnas\u2019s academic work, in its racism, does not meet the disciplinary standards of philosophy; but Cambridge evidently thought otherwise when they hired him, at which point his views were already on record.) The letter did not oppose itself squarely enough to the spectre of universities terminating academic employment on the basis of complaints about extramural speech. It did not canvass the possibility that students have a right not to be taught by someone who is on the record expressing the view that, if a student is Black, they are almost certainly less intelligent \u2013 let alone make an effort to distinguish that matter from the question of whether the university has the right to fire Cofnas from his research post. I didn\u2019t especially like some of the company I would be keeping if I signed the letter: the other signatories include a philosopher whom I\u2019ve repeatedly and publicly criticised for having a weird obsession with defending the permissibility of killing disabled people, and a talking head who was an associate of Jeffrey Epstein. And the letter did not tie the defence of academics\u2019 speech in the Cofnas case to the broader principle that is being ravaged in the <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span>, <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span>, Germany, Israel and elsewhere.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I signed it nevertheless. Six months ago my objections to the framing of the letter might have stopped me. But I thought about Jodi Dean, her suspension from teaching, and the investigation she is undergoing on the grounds that she may make some of her students feel unsafe. I thought about the German Jews who have been disciplined by the state in their protests against Israel\u2019s war, on the absurd grounds that they are being antisemitic. I thought about the students who have been arrested while peacefully protesting against an inhumane war, because they have been deemed by university administrators to be a threat to the safety of their fellow Jewish students (never mind that many of the protesting students are themselves Jewish). I thought about the former presidents of Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania, who were both forced to resign in a Republican witch hunt ostensibly about antisemitism but really about right-wing anger at university autonomy. I thought about colleagues at state universities in Florida, who are barred from teaching on their general education courses that \u2018systemic racism, sexism, oppression and privilege are inherent in the institutions of the United States.\u2019 I thought about colleagues in Texas, who can now have their tenure revoked because of \u2018moral turpitude\u2019. I thought about colleagues in Israel who wrote to me, soon after their government began its attack on Gaza, about the choice they faced between speaking out and keeping their jobs. I thought about Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, the Palestinian legal scholar and Israeli citizen, who was suspended by Hebrew University for calling for the abolition of Zionism, and later detained by Israeli police, strip-searched and handcuffed, and subjected to questions about her published views on international law and colonialism. I thought about Israa University, the last remaining university in Gaza, demolished by Israel in January.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">The point is not that Cofnas is just the same as the many people in the crosshairs of the right\u2019s war on academic freedom and free speech. The point is not \u2013 noxious as he is \u2013 Cofnas at all. Rather, the point is simply this. Do we think that students should be able to trigger investigations into academics on the grounds that their extramural speech makes them feel unsafe? Do we want to fuel the right\u2019s sense of grievance towards the university, when their minority presence within it is owed to the robust correlation between education and political liberalism, not some Marxist plot? Do we want to empower university administrators to fire academics on the grounds that they are attracting negative publicity? Do we think there is any guarantee that a further strengthened institutional power will only be wielded against those whose views and politics we abhor? If we say yes, what picture of power \u2013 theirs and ours \u2013 does that presume?<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp has-dropcap\"><span class=\"dropcaps dropcap--t\">T<\/span><span class=\"smallcapslede smallcapslede-spaced lrb-t-cac\">o which<\/span>\u200b a devil\u2019s advocate might say: isn\u2019t that a mug\u2019s game? Maybe. As I\u2019ve argued in the <em class=\"emphasisClass\"><span class=\"caps lrb-auto-caps\">LRB<\/span><\/em> before, \u2018free speech\u2019 and \u2018academic freedom\u2019 are, for many on the right, ideological notions, weapons to be wielded against the left and the institutions it is (falsely) believed to control, the university most of all.<span class=\"footnote-link\"><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v46\/n10\/amia-srinivasan\/if-we-say-yes?utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=20240515newissueUK&amp;utm_content=20240515newissueUK+CID_5b6a71a328ff44a57a0c1a8f58eff392&amp;utm_source=LRB%20email&amp;utm_term=Read%20more#\" class=\"tooltipstered setup\" >*<\/a><\/span> Some conservatives have, admirably, stood up for academic freedom in recent months, even where it presumably hurts them to do so; both the Princeton professor of jurisprudence Robert P. George and Sohrab Ahmari, the editor of <em class=\"emphasisClass\">Compact<\/em>, spoke out against the suspension of Dean while objecting strongly to her views. But notably absent from the letter in support of Dean were the signatures of many prominent free-speech warriors, including Steven Pinker, Greg Lukianoff, Jonathan Haidt, Conor Friedersdorf, Jordan Peterson and Bari Weiss.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">The free-speech brigade has also found justifications for the draconian repression of student protest. Weiss, citing the appalling, albeit rare, instances of antisemitism in the student protests, has complained that universities are going soft on them because of left-wing bias. Peterson has cheered on university presidents as they order the dismantling of what he calls \u2018pro- Hamas\u2019 encampments. Lukianoff, in a piece for the <em class=\"emphasisClass\">Sunday Times<\/em>, offered a lukewarm defence of students\u2019 right to free speech, before arguing that the current protests aren\u2019t exercises of free speech directed at an inhumane war, but rather the expression of \u2018groupthink\u2019 cultivated \u2018through ideological filters on hiring, promotion and even teaching\u2019. Pinker has called Harvard\u2019s student protesters \u2018poisonous\u2019 to the university\u2019s \u2018mission\u2019, and argued that it would be justified in calling the cops on them. Like Lukianoff, Pinker draws a contrast between genuine free speech and the speech of the student protesters: \u2018A university should be a forum in which people offer arguments backed by reason and guided by the search for common ground,\u2019 he says, not \u2018a place where they issue \u201cdemands\u201d chanted in rhyming slogans\u2019.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">In so arguing, Lukianoff and Pinker aren\u2019t simply denigrating the antiwar student protesters as mindless woke drones. They are implicitly equating freedom of speech with freedom of discussion and debate. But protest, too, is a mode of public speech, which \u2013 like free discussion \u2013 is vital to democracy. Self-styled defenders of \u2018free speech\u2019 like Pinker and Lukianoff ignore this fact, allowing them to square a commitment to free speech with the repression of protest. As the University of Chicago philosopher Anton Ford recently put it in the <em class=\"emphasisClass\">Chronicle of Higher Education<\/em>, \u2018if a university only acknowledges expression aimed at discovering truth, then all campus speech is measured by the yardstick of a seminar discussion, and basic democratic values are sacrificed.\u2019 Ford traces this narrow construal of free speech to the Chicago Statement, an approach to campus speech that was adopted (without, ironically, faculty or student consultation) by the University of Chicago in 2014, and which has since been adopted by more than a hundred <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span> higher education institutions \u2013 including many that have (like the University of Chicago) forcefully repressed student protests in recent months. While the Chicago Statement nods to the right to protest \u2013 and has been used by universities to defend that right \u2013 it nonetheless takes reasoned discussion as the paradigm of free speech. \u2018The University\u2019s fundamental commitment,\u2019 the statement says, \u2018is to the principle that debate or deliberation may not be suppressed.\u2019 The word \u2018protest\u2019 is used just once in the statement, to describe an attempt to silence speech.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (<span class=\"caps\">FIRE<\/span>), of which Lukianoff is president and <span class=\"caps\">CEO<\/span>, led the campaign to have the Chicago Statement widely adopted by <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span> educational institutions. <span class=\"caps\">FIRE<\/span> recently published a statement arguing that university bans on encampments do not violate the First Amendment, since free speech can legitimately be subject to restrictions on \u2018time, place and manner\u2019. That is indeed the standard understanding of how the First Amendment works. But one crucial test of \u2018time, place and manner\u2019 restrictions is that they be as narrowly tailored as possible (only as stringent as needed to protect the normal functioning of the relevant institution), thereby leaving ample room for expressive conduct. Many universities have failed this test. The temporary student encampments are often consistent with the normal functioning of universities, for example by observing \u2018quiet hours\u2019, not stopping students from attending classes, and even hosting classes and study groups. Where they are not \u2013 where, for example, the noise from an encampment disrupts classes \u2013 administrators should impose the minimal measures required for normal functioning to resume. And where student protesters engage in violence or harassment, a university\u2019s disciplinary codes should be fairly applied. (As the legal philosopher Brian Leiter observes, \u2018such incidents do not justify ending the protest and encampment, except under an indefensible principle of collective punishment.\u2019)<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Another crucial test is that \u2018time, place and manner\u2019 restrictions, and their application, be politically neutral. But it is no secret that university administrators, in their decisions about how to handle the protests, are bowing to partisan political pressure from pro-Israel legislators and donors. On 10 November, Columbia suspended its chapters of Jewish Voice for Peace and Students for Justice in Palestine, invoking a new policy that had been revised, unilaterally and with minimal communication to the student population, by top-level university administrators just two weeks earlier. The policy change introduced new \u2018time, place and manner\u2019 constraints \u2013 the category of \u2018special events\u2019 that had to be pre-approved was expanded to include any that would have more than 25 attendees or that took place outdoors \u2013 and gave the administration \u2018sole discretion\u2019 to sanction student groups that violated them. The changes came three weeks after pro-Palestinian student groups had started protesting on Columbia\u2019s campus (along with counter-protests organised by the Columbia Chapter of Students Supporting Israel, who were not suspended). The protests had provoked the ire of conservative politicians and donors. One hedge-fund billionaire alumnus declared on Fox: \u2018I think these kids at the colleges have shit for brains. I\u2019ve given to Columbia probably about fifty million dollars, over many years, and I\u2019m gonna suspend my giving.\u2019 Another hedge-fund billionaire resigned from the board of the Columbia Business School, citing \u2018blatantly anti-Jewish student groups and professors allowed to operate with complete impunity\u2019, rendering Jews \u2018not just unwelcome, but also unsafe on campus\u2019.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">When it comes to student protest, the <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span>\u2019s self-declared free-speech defenders have been taking notes. \u2018Why is it in America that the most appalling anti-Israel and pro-Hamas statements have all been coming from the nation\u2019s campuses?\u2019 Douglas Murray asked on Fox. The answer, he said, was straightforward: \u2018It is that they have been miseducating them, misinforming them, very very often through very hostile actors who are not just anti-Israel but anti-American.\u2019 Murray is a director of the Free Speech Union (<span class=\"caps\">FSU<\/span>), which claims that academic freedom is one of the \u2018five freedoms\u2019 it protects unequivocally and without partisan considerations. But for Murray academic freedom extends only to those who aren\u2019t indoctrinating the youth with their criticisms of Israel or the <span class=\"caps\">US<\/span>. The <span class=\"caps\">FSU<\/span>\u2019s founder, Toby Young, has been silent about the attacks on students\u2019 anti-war protests, though in private correspondence he told me that his position on this was \u2018the same as <span class=\"caps\">FIRE<\/span>\u2019s\u2019 \u2013 that is, that forcible repression of protest is often acceptable because of \u2018time, place and manner\u2019 restrictions. Soon after 7 October, Young issued a statement saying that \u2018the abduction, slaughter and rape of over a thousand Israeli men, women and children should be universally condemned by every university, college, museum, Whitehall department, football club, institution, in England.\u2019 A question: if universities and colleges \u2018should\u2019 condemn Hamas\u2019s morally abhorrent attack, why \u2018shouldn\u2019t\u2019 they also condemn Israel\u2019s morally abhorrent war of revenge? Rishi Sunak has summoned university vice chancellors from across the <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span> to Downing Street to discuss the \u2018unacceptable rise in antisemitism\u2019 on British campuses and \u2018the need for universities to be safe for our Jewish students\u2019. A spokesman for the prime minister said he expects \u2018robust action\u2019 against the protesters.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">After signing the letter criticising the investigation into Cofnas, I was written to by someone from the Committee for Academic Freedom, which bills itself as a non-partisan group of academics from across the political spectrum. He asked me whether I might consider signing up to the <span class=\"caps\">CAF<\/span>\u2019s \u2018three principles\u2019. I looked them up: \u2018I. Staff and students at <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span> universities should be free, within the limits of the law, to express any opinion without fear of reprisal.\u2019 \u2018<span class=\"caps\">II<\/span>. Staff and students at <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span> universities should not be compelled to express any opinion against their belief or conscience.\u2019 \u2018<span class=\"caps\">III<\/span>. <span class=\"caps\">UK<\/span> universities should not promote as a matter of official policy any political agenda or affiliate themselves with organisations promoting such agendas.\u2019 I thought about it for a bit. I\u2019m on board with Principle <span class=\"caps\">II<\/span>, so long as we don\u2019t think that asking staff and students to use someone\u2019s correct pronouns is akin to demanding they swear a loyalty oath. Principle I is problematic, because it doesn\u2019t register that academic freedom essentially involves viewpoint-based discrimination \u2013 that indeed the whole point of academic freedom is to protect academics\u2019 rights to exercise their expert judgment in hiring, peer review, promotion, examining, conferring degrees and so on. And Principle <span class=\"caps\">III<\/span> would prevent universities from condemning, say, Israel\u2019s systematic destruction of universities and schools in Gaza, which I think as educational institutions they are entitled to do.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I then clicked on the <span class=\"caps\">CAF<\/span>\u2019s \u2018Who We Are\u2019 section, and found that one of the organisation\u2019s seven advisory board members is Nigel Biggar. In my piece on free speech last year, I had noted that Biggar was a member of the <span class=\"caps\">FSU<\/span>; I described him as \u2018the emeritus Oxford theologian who has insisted that the British Empire \u201cwas not essentially racist, exploitative or wantonly violent\u201d\u2019; and I said that he is among those who long for \u2018a more traditional \u2013 often explicitly Christian \u2013 social morality\u2019. This was the sum total of my comments about Biggar. So I was surprised \u2013 genuinely surprised \u2013 when Biggar retweeted a post by the conservative academic Bruce Gilley, which linked to my piece with the following description: \u2018Tenured South Asian radical @amiasrinivasan says @NigelBiggar should be fired for rejecting the mantra that \u201cBritain must own up to its colonial past\u201d and saying \u201cthe British Empire was not essentially racist, exploitative, or wantonly violent.\u201d\u2019<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I decided to write an email to Biggar, with the subject line \u2018collegiality\u2019:<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Dear Nigel,<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I was stunned to see that you had retweeted a tweet by Bruce Gilley claiming that I had said in the <em class=\"emphasisClass\"><span class=\"caps lrb-auto-caps\">LRB<\/span><\/em> that you should be fired for your views on British colonialism. Evidently, you did not read the ten thousand-word piece Gilley cited, since in it I say no such thing. I mention you and your views only in connection with your work with the Free Speech Union and the broader network of academics and politicians who helped usher into existence the new academic freedom Act. While I don\u2019t agree with many of your substantive views, I never suggest that you should be in any way censured for them. On the contrary, in the piece I vociferously defend the rights of academics not to be fired for the exercise of their academic freedom, condemn several cases in which students have called for professors\u2019 heads (including Finnis and Stock), and criticise the \u2018university administrators who<span class=\"ellipsis\">\u00a0<span class=\"ellipsis-dot\">.<\/span><span class=\"ellipsis-dot\">.<\/span><span class=\"ellipsis-dot\">.<\/span><\/span> too often cravenly seek to appease\u2019 students.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">All this you would know had you taken the time to read the piece yourself. Indeed I cannot quite believe that I am having to write this email to a fellow academic \u2013 effectively saying the thing I say far too often to my students: have you actually done the reading? Clearly for Bruce Gilley careful reading and truthful representation do not matter; my piece becomes an occasion for another salvo in whatever ideological battle he is fighting. But I would have hoped for better from you, as an Oxford colleague.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Finally, I wonder what you make of Gilley calling me a \u2018tenured South Asian radical\u2019? Do you think it\u2019s dialectically useful to reduce people to their ethnic origins? Do you think this is an intellectually respectful thing to do to another academic? Would you encourage Oxford students to introduce the authors they read with reductivist demographic labels?<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I attach both a screenshot of the tweet, and a <span class=\"caps\">PDF<\/span> of my <em class=\"emphasisClass\"><span class=\"caps lrb-auto-caps\">LRB<\/span><\/em> piece. I look forward to your reply.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">All best wishes,<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">Amia<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p class=\"leftranged lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp\">I sent the email in June 2023, and am still waiting for Biggar\u2019s reply. Last time I checked, the retweet was still there.<\/p>\n<p class=\"lrb-t-r lrb-t-mdp has-dropcap\"><span class=\"dropcaps dropcap--t\">T<\/span><span class=\"smallcapslede smallcapslede-spaced lrb-t-cac\">he latest<\/span>\u200b open letter I have signed was drafted by some of my colleagues at Oxford, in support of a student pro-Palestinian encampment set up early on the morning of 6 May on the lawn outside Oxford\u2019s Pitt Rivers Museum. Before the letter was published, signatories were asked discreetly to spread the word among like-minded colleagues, asking whether they would be willing to add their names to it. One replied that he had talked it over with his partner, who is of Jewish heritage. They both had reservations about the letter\u2019s claim that Israel is committing genocide; he thought that thus far Israel\u2019s actions were better described as \u2018ethnic cleansing\u2019, though he believes the risk of genocide is real. \u2018But I don\u2019t think,\u2019 he finished, \u2018it would be morally or politically proportionate for me to let that reservation stand in the way of expressing solidarity with a student action that I think is overwhelmingly justified.\u2019 He signed the letter.<\/p>\n<p>____________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><span class=\"inner first last\"><span class=\"typogrify bio-content lrb-t-t lrb-t-ce\"><em>Amia Srinivasan\u00a0is the Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at All Souls College, Oxford and a contributing editor at the\u00a0<\/em><span class=\"caps lrb-auto-caps\">LRB<\/span><em>. Her first book, <\/em>The Right to Sex: Feminism in the 21<span class=\"ord\">st<\/span> Century<em>, was published in 2021. The title essay was first published in the <\/em><span class=\"caps lrb-auto-caps\">LRB<\/span> <em>as <\/em><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v40\/n06\/amia-srinivasan\/does-anyone-have-the-right-to-sex\" >\u2018Does anyone have the right to sex?\u2019<\/a><em> She\u2019s also written for the paper on subjects including <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v45\/n13\/amia-srinivasan\/cancelled\" >free speech<\/a> on campus, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v42\/n13\/amia-srinivasan\/he-she-one-they-ho-hus-hum-ita\" >pronouns<\/a>, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v39\/n17\/amia-srinivasan\/the-sucker-the-sucker\" >octopuses<\/a>, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v43\/n19\/amia-srinivasan\/what-does-fluffy-think\" >bestiality<\/a> and <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v40\/n19\/amia-srinivasan\/sharky-waters\" >sharks<\/a>.<\/em> <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.lrb.co.uk\/the-paper\/v46\/n10\/amia-srinivasan\/if-we-say-yes?utm_medium=email&amp;utm_campaign=20240515newissueUK&amp;utm_content=20240515newissueUK+CID_5b6a71a328ff44a57a0c1a8f58eff392&amp;utm_source=LRB%20email&amp;utm_term=Read%20more\" >Go to Original &#8211; lrb.co.uk<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>An open letter\u200b is an unloved thing. Written by committee and in haste, it is a monument to compromise: a minimal statement to which all signatories can agree, or \u2013 worse \u2013 a maximal statement that no signatory fully believes. Some academics have a general policy against signing them.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":251836,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[45],"tags":[229,609,1378,3294],"class_list":["post-262518","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-activism","tag-activism","tag-demonstrations","tag-protests","tag-students-anti-genocide-gaza"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/262518","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=262518"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/262518\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":262520,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/262518\/revisions\/262520"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/251836"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=262518"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=262518"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=262518"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}