Academic censorship by the University of
Cape Town (UCT) Executive: commentators have missed the point
Late in July 2016, the UCT Executive overturned a statutory
action taken 16 months earlier by the “vitally
important” UCT Academic Freedom
Committee (AFC) relating to the selection of the speaker for the TB Davie
Memorial Lecture, “a flagship event that celebrates academic freedom”. In doing this, I and many others maintain
that the Executive undermined the very structure and governance of UCT and violated
its statutory responsibility to defend the “fundamental and cornerstone
rights” of academic freedom and unfettered debate of
“ideas, even unpopular ones”.
Before I attempt to justify these views, let’s look
at the AFC that took the overturned action.
Like other statutory committees essential to the effective governance of
UCT, its job is to ensure the “expression
to the principles of simplicity, accountability and defined responsibility”, in
this case for academic freedom. In 2015,
the committee members were: the Vice-Chancellor (Dr Max Price); Price’s nominee
Deputy VC and eminent (NRF “A-rated”) law professor Danie Visser; UCT Council
representative advocate Jeremy
Gauntlett of Nkandla Constitutional Court fame; UCT Council representative Supreme Court Judge Ian Farlam,
chairperson of the Marikana
‘Massacre’ Commission; UCT Senate-appointed Professors David Benatar
(Philosoply), Leslie London (Public Health Medicine) and Pippa Skotnes (Fine
Art);
two non-professors nominated by the UCT Staff Association, Drs Elsia Galgut
(Philosophy) and Christine Swart (Mathematics); and two students nominated by
the UCT Students’ Representative Council. For its actions in the TB Davie
Lecture ‘Affair’, this committee has been as described by a senior member of
the UCT community supporting the Executive’s censorship decision as being
composed of “tone-deaf”, ”arrogant” “provocateurs” having an “absolutist
conception of academic freedom”. http://www.iol.co.za/sundayindependent/the-trumps-in-academias-midst-imperil-our-future-2051476
The UCT Executive justified its act of censorship (taken
less than two weeks before the scheduled lecture) on the basis of:
1.
allegations of “bigotry”, “blasphemy
and Islamophobia” against the speaker;
2.
“very serious security
considerations”; and
3.
the need to abandon academic
freedom depending on “context” in general and, in particular, “directives of
our Constitution” relating to “hate speech” and “incitement of
imminent violence”.
Unfortunately,
much of the commentary on this censorship has focused on item 1 or, worse
still, morphed into a debate
about the Palestinian vs Israel debacle. http://us3.campaign-archive1.com/?u=de6b759dc2cdfe70bfebce58c&id=a06db63659&e=9a3732f36d
Regardless, neither the UCT Executive, nor anyone else, has provided compelling
evidence supporting the allegations against the speaker, award-winning editor/journalist
Mr Flemming Rose. Until 4 August, the
only commentary on this matter circulated within UCT was a fear-motivated piece
by Judy Favish condemning Rose personally and maintaining that academic freedom
needs to be “contextualised”. http://www.uct.ac.za/dailynews/?id=9864 Fortunately,
AFC members Prof. David Benatar https://web.archive.org/web/20160723141724/http://politicsweb.co.za/opinion/uct-a-blow-against-academic-freedom,
Mr Jacques Rousseau http://synapses.co.za/flemming-rose-uct-tb-davie-academic-freedom-lecture/ and Dr Elisa Galgut http://www.uct.ac.za/dailynews/?id=9864have, in their personal
capacities, decisively refuted Favish’s and other item-1-related allegations.
For more on this, see the comments of a previous TB Davie speaker Kenan
Malik https://web.archive.org/web/20160723141223/https://kenanmalik.wordpress.com/2016/07/22/academic-freedom-and-academic-cowardice/ and Rose’s own comments. https://web.archive.org/web/20160723141548/https://www.indexoncensorship.org/2016/07/flemming-rose-responds-university-cape-town/
If precedents have any bearing on this matter, what about previous TB Davie
speakers, eminent ‘Orientalism’ critic Edward Said and linguist/activist
Noam Chomsky?
Said, has been described as an “anti-Semite” and "professor of
terror" and Chomsky as an
“anti–Semite” “patron of the neo-Nazis” and "the Ayatollah of
anti-American hatred." Sadly, a
common tactic employed by members of totalitarian movements to deal with their
critics when they cannot expose their moral or logical flaws is to label any
critique or call for debate as an insult and punish the offenders. We only need to look to at the South African
Broadcasting Corporation (past and present) and post-liberation Zimbabwe to
find ongoing examples of this tactic.
So, on the
basis of item 1, the Executive’s action was not justified. If there is some new evidence, that Rose is a
bigoted, blasphemous, hate/violence-speaking Islamophobe, produce it.
With
regard to item 2, “security”, the UCT Vice Chancellor’s letter is vague at
best. http://www.uct.ac.za/downloads/email/UCTExecLettertoAFC.2016.pdf The VC refers to “concerns”, but lists none
specifically. He says the Special
Executive Task Team (SETT), chaired by Deputy VC Prof. Francis Petersen, “raised concerns” about
the speaker when it “became aware” of the invitation to Mr Rose. Then it acted “immediately” and consulted “widely
within the University, and within the Muslim community of Cape Town”. The VC’s statement generates more questions
rather than understanding.
When
did the SETT become “aware” of the invitation?
Since two members of the Executive (the VC and Deputy VC Visser) are
members of the AFC, they were “aware” of it from March 2015. Who within or outside of SETT was
“concerned”. It was stated recently
that some (all?) of the ‘outsiders’ were “#RhodesMustFall
students” who “would not have allowed the speaker on campus”. http://www.iol.co.za/sundayindependent/the-trumps-in-academias-midst-imperil-our-future-2051476
What were the SETT/outsider concerns and underpinning evidence? Who were/are the ‘outsider’ elements who
constituted “very
serious security considerations”? Did
they ask the AFC/Rose to confirm that his address would not contain hate speech
or incite violence? Who was consulted “within the University”? Why consult “the Muslim community of Cape
Town” about a UCT-specific matter, given that there are many Muslim
staff/students at UCT? Given that the
AFC “planned, in consultation with Mr Rose, a panel
discussion between him and his critics in order that disagreements related to
tolerance and freedom of expression could be aired”, http://www.uct.ac.za/downloads/email/AFC.Statement.ReTBDavie2016.pdf were those
“concerned” with or opposed to the invitation invited to join this panel? If they were and declined, why?
Most
importantly, why was this act of censorship taken only 16 months after the
invitation was issued, resulting in a cancellation of the 2016 TB Davie Lecture?
A couple
of questions about more general statements by the Executive.
What is
meant by:
1.
“The right to academic freedom is FUNDAMENTAL
[= a central or primary rule or principle], but cannot be exercised in a vacuum.”?
and
2.
“Our campuses have become charged spaces.”
So, UCT is
now “an amalgam of ‘contextualised’ ‘spaces’ entirely devoid of matter driven by ‘circumstances’.
We keep hearing about demands for and descriptions of
“spaces”: “safe”, “charged” or otherwise.
To learn more on this see Dean of Law/Prof. Penelope
Andrews’ piece: “Disagreement can become
an act of love and reconciliation”. http://www.uct.ac.za/dailynews/?id=9804 Prof.
Andrews and I think that the last thing to do with members of the UCT community
who disagree with one another is to isolate them. Weren’t
separate “spaces” the goal of Apartheid?
One last question.
Given the Executive’s statement:
“We know that many within our universities don’t feel
safe to engage, which undermines the spirit of mutual tolerance and
understanding.”
Why cancel a world-renowned lecture that could have
brought open-minded opponents on to the same stage? Two possible answers are:
1.
The Executive is
most concerned about (fears?) the actions of subsets of UCT’s community bent on
using intimidation and violence, rather than debate/discussion, to implement
their ideologies.
2.
It is, as described
by some internal critics, controlled by Trump-like demagogues determined to dictate
what, or what not, should happen at UCT.
I guess we just have to wait until the UCT Executive,
SETT, “#RhodesMustFall students and anybody else who can
control academic freedom at UCT to
“ultimately” decide on the “unacceptability” this behaviour so some action
might eventually be taken and the AFC’s vision can become a reality.
“Ours should be a campus on which people are free to
express and contest ideas,
even unpopular ones.”
Otherwise, we may hear a repeat of the terrifying
quote attributed to a US military officer during the Vietnam War.
"We had to destroy the village in order to save it."
Emeritus UCT Prof. Tim Crowe
No comments:
Post a Comment