Academic Freedom? In Defence Of A Radical Pursuit Of Truths
By Shamala Kumar –AUGUST 17, 2020
Academic freedoms are vital to universities, but have been under attack for years. Galileo Galilei was tried and found guilty for challenging the prevailing view of the Earth as the centre of the universe. Galileo’s ideas were a threat to the all-powerful Catholic establishment. He was found guilty by the Roman Catholic Inquisition in 1633 and forced to recant. Yet today, it is his truth that prevails. Galileo is now recognised as the father of modern physics. Over the years, academic freedoms have been challenged on a number of fronts in Sri Lanka and elsewhere, making it difficult for university teachers to study and speak unpopular truths, particularly when they are unpalatable to the powers that be. Some of these challenges have come from State repression, others from public and institutional fears, and still others from the neoliberal transformation of universities.
Academic freedom refers to both the freedom for those within universities to freely express their views without censure and for institutions to determine their scholarly activities. With respect to institutional academic freedom, the University Grants Commission has claimed progressively greater authority in academic matters impinging on those exercised by universities. Infringement of freedoms have been coupled to systematic defunding of education and higher education, which in turn have resulted in weakened universities that struggle to fulfil their mandate and withstand political interference.
These dysfunctionalities have generated suspicion and antipathy towards universities, teachers and even students. They have resulted in the public questioning the purpose of universities calling for stricter regulation and more accountability, which in turn have affected academic freedoms. Challenges to academic freedom also comes from global forces, which have transformed the very conception of education from one that is pluralistic and organic to one that is standardized and sterilized. Individual and institutional academic freedoms have thereby been further attacked and restricted, creating a vicious cycle that has persisted in Sri Lankan higher education for decades. The crisis is likely to deepen in the near future.
We, as members of the university community, have been complicit in accepting the trends towards the erosion of academic freedom. Within universities, we have permitted the gradual weakening of institutional structures that uphold core principles of education, which include not only academic freedom, but also academic rigour, critical self-reflection and a commitment to free, progressive, and democratic education. We are been willing actors in the politicization of education, in the transformation of education from one that is for the people to one that fulfils the narrow interests of capitalist classes. And seemingly paradoxically (although not really), we have also intensely protected ourselves against public scrutiny and accountability, as we race in the pursuit of a questionable brand of ‘excellence’.
The Present Political Context
In this scenario, what is the likely outcome of the decisive win of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP)? Recent actions by government actors suggest little commitment to democratic processes or progressive ideals. They espouse an the-ends-justify-the-means approach to tacking any problems they may face. The use of militarization and securitization as these ‘means’ and the determination to curb any form of resistance are already demonstrated. The public appear to be complacent in accepting such modes of action. They willing allow such encroachments of the military into civilian life, and subject themselves to vigilance mechanisms and similar tactics that would have been met with widespread resistance in the past.
Within universities, we must realise that the SLPP’s strategy in higher education is very much a neoliberal project. National policy documents, initiatives, and the President’s speeches demonstrate a promotion of private education. The President in particular, fetishizes technology, and specifically technical education. He dismisses the social sciences and the humanities. Thus, education is narrowly defined and valued purely with financial ends in mind. This narrowing of the conceptions of education, however, has evolved over a number of years and cannot be blamed on a single individual. It is my belief that the development of such purely narrow monetary conceptions of education are why we have evolved into a society with such little public interest in democracy and justice, and hardly any concern over blatant religious intolerance, misogyny, and rabid nationalism. Such a transformation of education will ultimately be at the expense of the poor and the working class, who will be further oppressed as this education will not serve them make sense of their reality and become even less accessible. In fact, it will serve instead to pathologise their conditions and criminalise their attempt to address the conditions.
The preference of the current government for centralisation suggests that its aspirations will be decided by a privileged few. Its tendencies towards authoritarianism means that these decisions will not be open for negotiation. Within universities we must brace ourselves to curtailed academic freedom, further defunding and shifts towards fee-levying and privatized higher education enforced through coercive tactics. Today’s political landscape does not bode well.
Addressing these challenges
Challenging these forces requires a radical transformation of our universities in a way that is true to purpose. It requires strength, conviction, and hope. It requires a truly radical struggle. Rights to free association, speech, and protest are closely tied to the freedoms that universities enjoy. If we are to continue to enjoy academic freedom, it is up to us to uphold these same freedoms within and without the university and to fully use our academic freedom to protest infringements of these rights of others. It is up to us to expect students to appreciate and use these freedoms. We must integrate them to all that we do at universities, while being reflective of our mandate to educate and nurture students to serve in a democratic and pluralistic society by ensuring that the university is also reflective of such a society.
We must clearly articulate what constitutes free education, and individual and institutional academic freedom and run universities according to such principles. We must broaden the conception of free education to develop universities as spaces of public engagement, through academic discussions, debates, workshops and courses that are designed to enrich society, rather than to make money. In recent years, with the focus on securitization, public access to universities have become difficult with some universities requiring administrative authorization to enter campus. We must also ensure that universities are provided with the resources required to run our programmes (right now we have no money for cleaning staff).
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