New York Post

CANCEL COUNCIL FORMED

Profs for free speech

- By HILLEL ITALIE

Some 200 scholars from across the country have formed the Academic Freedom Alliance, which has a mission to help college educators “speak, instruct, and publish without fear of sanction, bullying, punishment, or persecutio­n.”

Launched Monday, the nonprofit organizati­on arose out of discussion­s among some Princeton University faculty members over how to counter what they see as growing intoleranc­e of differing viewpoints. They plan to serve as advocates for those they believe have been unjustly attacked, and to provide money for legal support if needed. Members will pay an annual fee of $50 if they are tenured professors; the fee is $35 for others. The alliance also is seeking donations.

“We were looking for a way to foster a national conversati­on about these kinds of issues,” says Princeton’s Keith E. Whittingto­n, who chairs the alliance’s academic committee.

Members range politicall­y from Harvard University’s Cornel West, a Bernie Sanders supporter, to retired Vanderbilt University professor Carol Swain, a backer of former President Donald Trump.

Others in the alliance include constituti­onal scholar Sanford Levinson, based at the University of Texas School of Law; award-winning novelist Charles Johnson, a professor emeritus at the University of Washington; and Nadine Strossen, former president of the ACLU and a professor emerita at

New York Law School.

Some members have been involved in free-speech controvers­ies. Northweste­rn University professor Laura Kipnis was condemned by some students for her 2015 essay “Sexual Paranoia Strikes Academe,” in which she challenged the school’s ban on teachers and students dating each other.

Steven Pinker, Harvard professor and best-selling linguist, was criticized by members of the Linguistic Society of America in 2011 for alleged insensitiv­ity to racism and sexism. The group’s board defended Pinker, declaring, “It is not the mission of the Society to control the opinions of its members, nor their expression.”

Whittingto­n, whose books include “Speak Freely: Why Universiti­es Must Defend Free Speech,” said the alliance would be “narrowly focused on free speech and academic freedom issues.”

Asked if the alliance is a response to “cancel culture,” however that might be defined, Whittingto­n called it an “amorphous phrase,” but noted that “some of what gets characteri­zed as cancel culture poses a threat to a free society tolerant of dissent.”

“To the extent that there are organized efforts to suppress and sanction professors who espouse controvers­ial or unorthodox views, the alliance seeks to counter those pressures. Such pressures preceded what now gets characteri­zed as cancel culture, but they have some overlap,” he said.

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