Academic Freedom in a Plural World
Title
Academic Freedom in a Plural World
Subtitle
Global Critical Perspectives
Price
€ 165,00
ISBN
9789633866535
Format
Hardback
Number of pages
470
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.2 x 22.9 cm
Category
Law
Imprint
Table of Contents
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Acknowledgements

Introduction
Nandini Ramanujam and Frédéric Mégret

Part I: Imagining, Defending, Conceptualizing Academic Freedom

Academic Freedom as Freedom of Complex Association
Jacob Levy

Academic Freedom and University Autonomy: An Agenda for Professional Public Engagement
Sijbolt Noorda

The Political Cosmetology of Academic Freedom
Jean-François Gaudreault-DesBiens

How Structure, Culture, and the Individual Together Constrain and Enable Academic Freedom in China: A Historical Perspective
Zhidong Hao

Beyond the Periphery? Academic Freedom as a Matter of Human Rights
Sejal Parmar

 Part II: Diversity and the Democratization of Academic Freedom

Nationalist Backlash to Anti-Racist Education: A Transnational Blueprint for Academic Unfreedom
Vincent Wong

Coloniality and Diversity of Academic Freedom: The African Context
Kwadwo Appiagyei-Atua

Freedom for All: Academic Freedom in a Pluralistic Society
Tamara Thermitus

Academic Freedom and Social Justice in Quebec
Sophie Bisping

The Simultaneous, Crucial Pursuit of Academic Freedom and Equity, Diversity, & Inclusion (EDI) through a Relational Approach
Angela Campbell

Part III: Between Authoritarianism and Populism: State Interference with Academic Freedom

The Crisis of Academic Freedom at the Beginning of the 21st Century: Europe in a Plural World
Liviu Matei

A tale of two stories: visible and less visible assaults on academic freedom in France
Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchezz

Academic Freedoms in Modern Russia: “Dawn” and “Dusk” of the Higher School of Economics
Andrey Shcherbovich

Challenges of Academic Freedom in India: Considering the Human Rights Education Framework for Amplifying Marginalized Student Voices
Nidhi Sadana Sabharwal and Brigid Freeman

China’s Transnational Impact on Academic Freedom: Spectrum, Impacts, and Response
Teng Biao and Catherine Malanga

 

Part IV: Emerging Threats and Challenges

Restricting Academic Freedom at Universities: How Corporations Contribute to the Problem
Hani Morgan

Academic Freedom and Dark Money Donors: The Cases of Wisconsin, North Carolina, and Florida
Isaac Kamola

Beyond Academic Freedom: Australian Universities and Post-Reform China
John Fitzgerald

Mining and Fossil-Fuel Entanglements with the University in an Era of Climate Change: Impacts for Academic Freedom and Climate (In)Action
Kristen Lyons

Academic Freedom in Online Learning
Katarzyna Kaczmarska and Corinne Lennox

Academic Freedom and University Rankings
Chris Brink

Academic Freedom: Swimming against the Technological Tide
Chavan Kissoon and Terence Karran

Contributors
Index

Frédéric Mégret (ed.)

Academic Freedom in a Plural World

Global Critical Perspectives

The notion of academic freedom dates back to the creation of universities and has long been understood to be central to their vocation. This freedom has come under attack by different actors throughout its history. In the current context, rising threats to democracy and human liberties, the corporatization of research, concerns about diversity and increased societal polarization, are putting a considerable pressure on its exercise. However, academic freedom is also a concept that suffers from persistent ambiguities associated with the general notion of freedom as well as debates about the function of universities.
This edited collection addresses the question of academic freedom by situating it in its broader global context. More conceptual treatments contribute to an understanding of academic freedom as distinct and separate from, although related to, freedom of expression, or student rights. These conceptual treatments are combined with studies of actual struggles over the scope of academic freedom in specific universities. The contributions come from a broad variety of sites seek to deprovincialize the conversation beyond North America or the English-speaking world.

Editor

Frédéric Mégret

Frédéric Mégret is a Professor of Law and a William Dawson Scholar at McGill University. He is also the Co-Director of Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism.

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