University of Chicago weighs free speech
vs. crackdown on hecklers
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[September 02, 2016]
By David Ingram
(Reuters) - Disruption of a local
prosecutor's speech at the University of Chicago by hecklers unhappy
with her handling of a police shooting may have been the last straw for
administrators at one of the country's most prestigious schools.
After years of tolerating dissenters who shouted down unpopular speakers
on campus, the school is now considering a policy of meting out
suspensions, expulsions or other punishment for those it sees as
violating free speech rights.
"I think the university is now signaling that we mean business here,"
said Jerry Coyne, an ecology and evolution professor and an outspoken
critic of dissident students who he says are acting "entitled."
"What they're basically saying is, 'We have the right to harass anybody
we don't like,'" Coyne, who is not a member of the faculty committee,
said about the disrupters.
University rules already bar interfering with campus activities, but
faculty and students said they could not recall them ever being
enforced.
The panel is seeking ways to streamline a "cumbersome" student
disciplinary system that dates back to the era of Vietnam War protests,
according to a memo sent to faculty in June. The aim is to protect
"freedom of expression, inquiry and debate" from interference, the memo
says.
The proposal is the latest volley in a battle on U.S. university
campuses over what constitutes free speech in an academic environment.
When does a student have a right to heckle and shout down someone with
an offensive point of view? Should a school cancel a speech that
generates too much controversy? Does a student have a right to be warned
before attending an academic lecture that may prove upsetting?
On the last question, the University of Chicago came out strongly last
month in favor of giving faculty the right to decide if and when to warn
students whenever lecture material might upset or offend some of them.
Students, for instance, have been known to object to lectures on novels
containing scenes of sexual assault. In August the dean of students, Jay
Ellison, sent a letter to incoming students saying that such "trigger
warnings" were strictly optional.
He vowed the university would not cancel a talk or presentation no
matter how much controversy it generated or how strongly some students
objected.
Some students defend their right to heckle speakers they consider
morally objectionable. They say that authority figures such as the
prosecutor who spoke in February at the University of Chicago, Cook
County State's Attorney Anita Alvarez, have many opportunities to speak
their minds.
Alvarez, who took more than a year to charge a white police officer who
fatally shot a black teenager in 2014, has drawn harsh criticism in
Chicago from Black Lives Matter supporters.
"In a world that is consistently silencing black voices, I think it's
important to make ourselves heard in a way that we cannot be ignored,"
said Mary Blair, a University of Chicago sophomore who was part of the
Alvarez protest.
In March, Alvarez lost a primary election. Her office did not respond to
interview requests.
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Demonstrators stand outside UIC Pavilion before Republican U.S.
presidential candidate Donald Trump a rally at the University of Illinois at
Chicago March 11, 2016. REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski/File Photo
Located in the third-largest U.S. city, the University of Chicago,
which dates to 1890, is highly ranked academically, lending its name
to the "Chicago School" of economics.
President Barack Obama, who taught law there, has stood up for
campuses hosting divisive speakers.
"If you disagree with somebody, bring them in and ask them tough
questions," Obama told Rutgers University's commencement in May. He
said students should not "shut your ears off because you're too
fragile."
Rutgers in New Jersey is one of many U.S. schools that have canceled
speeches in the face of protests in recent years. In March, hecklers
shut down an event for Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump
at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
At the University of Chicago, the chairman of the faculty committee,
due to make recommendations by Dec. 15, said he is keeping an open
mind about how to change the disciplinary system.
"We're not opposed to protest. We're opposed to disruption," said
Randal Picker, a law professor. "These are university campuses;
there should be a lot of activity on them."
Some students blasted the creation of the committee, calling it an
attempt to discourage left-leaning causes.
"It comes from a place of reputation management, of wanting to
preserve the university's image to alumni, to parents, and to try to
control the issues that are on the university's agenda," said Cosmo
Albrecht, a member of student government and a junior from San
Antonio, Texas.
Maurice Farber, a senior who is president of the university's Israel
Engagement Association, supports getting tough with disrupters but
would not rule out heckling someone who denied the Holocaust, for
example.
"It's very difficult for me to say that I wouldn't try to shut
someone down who was spreading a message of hate," he said.
(Reporting by David Ingram in New York; Editing by Frank McGurty and
David Gregorio)
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