In recent times, a strong call for has echoed through academia, offering hope to scholars who have been marginalised or have lost their jobs due to what were deemed controversial opinions. However, many of those who have argued for such freedom, on both the political left and right, have taken a very different view when it comes to the rights of academics to express solidarity with Palestine.
In the wake of the tragic events of 7?October, several major UK newspapers that?had previously been vocal in their opposition to supposed cancel culture in academia launched what can only be described as a witch-hunt against academics who attempted to contextualise what occurred within the broader narrative of a historical occupation, branding them ¡°¡± and . Some journalists went as far as to contact universities directly in a concerted effort to bully these academics into silence. And while some universities have stood firm in defence of their faculty¡¯s right to free expression, others have succumbed to the external pressures, threatening investigations against faculty members merely for expressing solidarity with Palestinians on personal social media accounts.
Such expressions have also exposed academics to a relentless tide of abuse ¨C not only from external critics, but also from their own academic peers. Other colleagues stayed conspicuously silent as all this played out,?and those included many proponents of gender-critical ideology, who have vocally championed their own free speech in the face of efforts to shut them down and damage their own careers.
This inconsistency betrays a selective approach to free speech, driven by an increasingly fashionable stance against ¡°wokeness¡± ¨C a pejorative label with which Palestinian solidarity, alongside the transgender rights movement, has been tarred. It reveals an inclination to silence rather than engage with challenging perspectives: an inclination that is every bit as troubling when it comes from the right as when it comes from the left.
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Selectively advocating for free speech according to the political issue under discussion is not only hypocritical and unacceptable?coming from former UK home secretary Suella Braverman, the outspoken enemy of ¡°wokeness¡± who, controversially and unsuccessfully, to ban a pro-Palestine march earlier this month, before she was sacked by prime minister Rishi Sunak; it is also hypocritical and unacceptable?from academics who complain that the threat of being cancelled is stifling academic debate.
No one who cheered when the government passed the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Bill earlier this year should now be applauding a minister¡¯s bullying of UK Research and Innovation to shut down its equality advisory body over allegedly ¡°extremist¡± social media posts on the Israel-Gaza conflict by some of the committee¡¯s members. Everyone should be chilled by the recent revelation that the UK government compiled on academics¡¯ social media activity, targeting those supporting transgender rights, Black Lives Matter and, most recently, Palestine. Such measures are not isolated but indicate a overreach that threatens the bedrock of intellectual freedom and open dialogue.
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It is also a profound irony that those in the vanguard of academic research and advocacy around decolonisation and equality, who have dedicated their careers to exposing and challenging the deep-seated disparities of our societies, now choose silence in the face of Palestine's plight. How can this be squared with their vociferous resolve to dismantle systems of oppression and extend solidarity to the oppressed? I understand that some decolonisation advocates might also fear being labelled antisemitic and pro-terrorist, but they ought to have more faith in their conviction ¨C and their ability to articulate ¨C that it is not.
This failure to back up fine words with action is more than a personal failing, of course. It is an institutional one, too. How can Western universities claim to champion the ideals of decolonisation while remaining entwined ¨C in terms of investments and research ties ¨C with the defence and security industries, whose activities often perpetuate the very conditions these institutions purport to oppose?
But that should not overshadow the personal failings. How do those who study and teach the complexities of the Middle East reconcile their inaction with the realities on the ground? How can we expect future generations to take seriously the research and teachings of those who claim to embrace progressive values but who stand silent in the face of injustice? And, ultimately, what is the value of academic enquiry if it retreats into the comfort of abstraction and silence rather than make a stand?
These are the questions that must be confronted if academia is to retain any semblance of integrity in its pursuit of truth and justice.
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is a senior lecturer in human resource management and organisation studies at Royal Holloway, University of London.
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