The Volokh Conspiracy
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Academic Freedom Alliance Letter to San Diego State University
Philosophy professor suspended from teaching his class on racism for showing a slide with examples of racial epithets
The Academic Freedom Alliance released a public letter to San Diego State University calling on the university to reaffirm the academic freedom of philosophy professor J. Angelo Corlett.
SDSU removed Corlett from the classroom after students complained that he had shown a slide with examples of racial epithets in his class on Philosophy, Racism and Justice and his class on critical thinking. His published scholarship has focused on issues of racism and hate speech, and he brought that expertise to bear in his classroom teaching.
Although Corlett does not currently seem to be under investigation for violations of university policy, he has been removed from teaching his classes and will apparently be "reassigned" to teach other classes in the future. The Vice President of Student Affairs and Campus Diversity asserted that such an administrative decision was "not about free expression or academic freedom." The university administrator is mistaken.
For professors to be removed from their classes because students object to the controversial content of those classes strikes at the heart of academic freedom protections. It violates San Diego State University's own stated policies that guarantee freedom of teaching to faculty and the freedom of every member of the campus community to express even "offensive speech."
The university's actions also violate its obligations under the First Amendment. Notably, the university specifically recognizes those First Amendment rights of faculty members in its policies. San Diego State University's actions here are eerily reminiscent of the situation assessed by a federal circuit court in Hardy v. Jefferson County Community College. In that case, the community college ended the employment of an instructor when some students and community activists objected that he had discussed various racial epithets and how they could be used to marginalize and oppress in his class on interpersonal communication. From the opinion in the Hardy case:
The lecture included a discussion and analysis of words that have historically served the interests of the dominant culture in which they arise. Hardy solicited from his students examples of such terms. Among their suggestions were the words "girl," "lady," "faggot," "nigger," and "bitch."
The court found that such a classroom discussion was protected by the First Amendment and that university administrators who could be shown to have retaliated against a professor for engaging in such constitutionally protected speech could be stripped of the protections of qualified immunity.
San Diego State University should immediately reinstate Professor Corlett to his classroom duties and should reevaluate how it responds to complaints about contractually and constitutionally protected speech in the future.
From the letter:
There is no question that the removal of Professor Corlett from the classroom is a form of university sanction. It is also quite obvious that removal or "reassignment" of Professor Corlett in specific response to controversial but instructionally germane material that Professor Corlett introduced into his classroom is not just relevant to his academic freedom but a grievous violation of is academic freedom. The AAUP has long emphasized that suspending a professor from his teaching duties is in and of itself a "severe sanction second only to dismissal" and should be undertaken only when absolutely necessary and with proper procedural protections. There can be no excuse for imposing such a sanction as a consequence of student or administrator disagreement with the content of a class. If the freedom of teaching that is at the heart of academic freedom means anything, it must mean that faculty cannot be removed or "reassigned" because someone objects to the ideas being taught. It is not hard to see how this assertion of a unilateral power to reassign instructors who offend their students could have sweeping consequences for the freedom of university professors to teach contentious subject matter. A university could just as easily "reassign" a professor if a student objects to a professor teaching critical race theory, and the consequences for academic freedom would be just as dire.
UPDATE [from Eugene Volokh]: For Prof. Randall Kennedy's and my pretty detailed article on this subject, albeit focused on our field (law teaching), see The New Taboo: Quoting Epithets in the Classroom and Beyond.
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"The Vice President of Student Affairs and Campus Diversity asserted that such an administrative decision was "not about free expression or academic freedom.""
I don't know when this trend of having your spokesperson stand up and assert as true things that are obviously false, but it's been going on for way too long. As if Baghdad Bob has taught everyone on the planet his PR techniques. That VPSACD should be humiliated to look so stupid publicly, but probably not.
"I don't know when this trend of having your spokesperson stand up and assert as true things that are obviously false, "
This should undermine the rest of the work of SDSU. If SDSU's spokesperson is willing make such an obvious false claim, why shouldn't we expect that other administrators and professors at the school are make less obviously false claims?
I mean, the job of a university it to try to seek truth. And if a spokesperson is willing to lie so blatantly when it serves his interests, why shouldn't we expect the same of the rest of the school?
"the job of a university it to try to seek truth."
No, its to teach commonly accepted concepts to students so they can be productive adults.
Just like universities in the Soviet Union?
Universities in the Soviet Union taught scientific communism (among other things).
I mean...What?
The class is literally "Philosophy, Racism and Justice". You're telling me you can't even show the racist terms on a slide during the class without being suspended?
I'm honestly baffled. How do you even....
Its a trap, Professor Ackbar.
Yes, if I signed up for that class I’d have expected going into it that I’d see some pretty shitty stuff.
Maybe the complainers expected the class would be all woke sloganeering and maybe field trips to bust up the outside eating areas at local restaurants or something. Maybe making fun of white girls wearing cornrows or walking around campus looking for people making the ok sign.
I grew up in the old south in the 60s. Real live racism as commonly practiced back then and occasionally practiced now was really really nasty stuff. Seems like you’d want to learn about the real deal.
Maybe we should have a few seminars to impress upon these adolescents the need to grow up. That their feelings are their problem only and they have no right to inflict their feelings on other people. Using "feelings" to avoid learning the facts of life is just plain stupid.
There are a lot of Ukrainians today who are coping with their feelings and handling a very tough set of facts. If they can do it, so can you.
Finally, using "feelings" to attract attention should result in expulsion.
This kind of abhorrent behavior will continue until damages awarded seriously stings the colleges. I suggest 10 - 15% of their endowment or annual budget.
The prof "had shown a slide with examples of racial epithets in his class on Philosophy, Racism and Justice". If his objective was to show why use of racial epithets is bad, I guess getting himself fired means he was pretty sucessful. But he also used the slide in his "class on critical thinking". If his objective was to show how important critical thinking is, and how bad the consequences of NOT thinking critcally can be, then I guess by getting fired he was successful there, too.
Not only should the Prof be reinstated, he deserves a raise! I bet most of the students in his classes haven't learned as much from any other profs.
"There's a bunch of words you cannot say"
"What words?"
"I can't tell you"
Education, everybody!
mportant message for all readers: EUGENE VOLOKH NEEDS TO DISCLOSE HIS SOURCES OF FUNDING. HE MAY BE TAKING BRIBES DIRECTLY FROM BIG TECH AND SILICON VALLEY. HIS FREE SPEECH ABSOLUTISM VIEWS ENDANGER AMERICAN SOCIETY BY LETTING CYBERHARASSERS AND CYBERSTALKERS OFF THE HOOK AND LEAVING VICTIMS WITH NO RECOURSE FOR ONLINE ABUSE AND CRIMES. HIS VIEWS AND LEGAL CONCLUSIONS MAY BE TAINTED WITH BIAS BECAUSE HE MAY BE TAKING FUNDING AND BRIBES FROM BIG TECH OR BIG TECH LOBBY GROUPS.
Eugene Volokh, you need to disclose your sources of funding. Right now, you have authored several papers under the funding of Google, that portray Google in a positive light, "concluding" that Google should enjoy First Amendment protections and have no regulation.
See this paper here: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2055364
It clear states the paper was "commissioned by Google". This means you likely made money from Google for writing this paper. This taints your impartiality - of course you will conclude that Google should be free of regulation, if Google is paying you.
You also vehemently support online harassment, oppose any regulation against regulating cyberharassment, doxing, and harassment. You NEED to DISCLOSE YOUR SOURCES OF FUNDING. I suspect you may be funded directly by Google and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), both of which oppose any regulation of the internet that would protect victims of online stalking, harassment, and abuse. Otherwise you may be bribed by Big Tech to purposely put out legal "analysis" that favours lack of regulation, and which harms victims of online harassment because they cannot get legal protection.
There is a reason Eugene never address the negative effects of online harassment in any of his papers.
Please disclose your sources of funding ASAP for the world to take you seriously.
Perhaps, the student plaintiff should be suspended for causing a hostile work environment, for harassment, and for racism. Did the student report a complaint if his peers used those words?
"I'm wondering why a professor, even a tenured one would teach such a class"
Because University is supposed to be (partially) about exploring and discussing complicated, potentially borderline topics. I took one in college called "Art, blasphemy, pornography, and propaganda"
Not being even able to discuss or show the racist terms, to critically examine them...boggles the mind. It's not university anymore. It's a seminary.
Intelligent adminstrators usually promote people out. You are not teaching that class anymore because we have a more important assignment, with a big raise for you. That will sound familiar to people who worked in government. Cannot be sued for a promotion, and the raise is cheaper than the legal fees to defend one.
I've often wondered how that meme got started and why it has flourished. I have a vague impression that the first universities were founded back in the Middle Ages or Medieval Period for mostly religious purposes, or philosophy in general, then medicine, poor as it was back then. Mathematics and physics began as branches of philosophy, says another vague memory.
Engineering is entirely a vocational field, but it has its roots in math and physics, and has a lot of classes in common, so why not teach it in the same universities? You can still pretend engineering research, such as better materials, is not better handled as a private endeavor.
And then everything else got folded in too, and the pretense of being research required all sorts of bogus degrees, and here we are.
This is more of a general issue. But classically, university is supposed to be about the "cutting edge" of science, literature, art, etc. About the boundaries. Not just about regurgitating what is known and safe and good. About critically examining these issues. Some will pan out. Some won't. But being able to explore, in all directions, freely, was critical
The "safe" career move of just teaching the same old thing, in the same old boring, accepted context, shouldn't get one anywhere. As a background sure. But there has to be some advancement. Some new direction.
I might disagree. It's about transfer of knowledge AND challenging orthodoxy/development.
Sure. Read Shakespeare. But ALSO take the edgy classes. Know the orthodoxy AND be able to challenge it and develop.
If it's just about what is known, it doesn't do any good.
"About the boundaries. Not just about regurgitating what is known and safe and good."
You are confusing "research" [secondary purpose] with "teaching", the primary purpose.
When teaching, its the known things that must be taught. Otherwise, you are not preparing the students for life.
Universities aren't "just" about the old, safe, and good. They are about the cutting edge.
Because when students go into the world, it's the cutting edge they will need. While the historical research is nice as a backbone, it's the cutting edge where they will be doing their work.
Try to do well in government, get crushed. Be so toxic they have to get rid of you, you get kicked upstairs, where you can do less damage.
“Because when students go into the world, it's the cutting edge they will need”
No, they’ll need competence and a reliable ability to meet the requirements of the career at which they arrive, very little of which has to with the “cutting edge” of anything.