The Columbus Dispatch

ACLU moves to block law on speech by professors

- Caroline Beck

The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed a lawsuit Tuesday on behalf of two Purdue University Fort Wayne professors to block a new state law that opponents say will stifle free speech on public college campuses and put faculty at risk of unfair discipline.

SB 202, which was passed by the state legislatur­e earlier this year, will require state universiti­es to review tenured professors every five years and would limit public universiti­es’ ability to speak out on “political, moral, or ideologica­l issues.”

The ACLU filed the lawsuit against Purdue University on behalf of two Purdue University Fort Wayne professors: Steven Carr, a professor of communicat­ions and the director of the Institute for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, and David Schuster, an associate history professor.

The law is set to go into effect July 1. The complaint claims that the new law violates the professors’ First and 14th Amendment rights by limiting their free speech and puts them at risk of penalties such as not being promoted, having their tenure revoked or facing terminatio­n.

The complaint says that the law’s language about fostering “a culture of free inquiry, free expression, and intellectu­al diversity” and exposing students “to scholarly works from a variety of political or ideologica­l frameworks” is too vague and puts professors at risk.

“SEA 202 puts Indiana’s professors in an untenable position,” said ACLU of Indiana staff attorney Stevie Pactor in a statement. “Through vague language and the threat of harsh sanctions, including terminatio­n, the law strips professors of the academic freedom that the Supreme Court has long recognized they have the right to exercise.”

The original author of the law, Republican Sen. Spencer Deery said in a statement that the bill was “carefully crafted to protect academic freedom, promote free speech and strengthen the quality of education Hoosiers receive.”

“It was designed to withstand desperate measures from those who do not want to see changes in the culture and practices of higher education or who insist their narrow worldview is the only one that counts,” Deery said.

The ACLU also claims that the new law could mean that professors must “give debunked theories equal time in their classrooms alongside rigorously studied academic analysis.”

For instance, the complaint says, Schuster, who teaches classes on U.S. history, worries the law requires him to teach “divergent” scholarly perspectiv­es regarding slavery.

Carr, who teaches about the Holocaust, fears the new law will require him to devote classroom time to perspectiv­es that deny the Holocaust even occurred.

When SB 202 was up for debate earlier this year, it saw near-universal condemnati­on from faculty organizati­ons at the state’s public universiti­es, including Purdue University’s faculty-led Senate.

Herald-times reporter Brian Rosenzweig contribute­d.

Caroline’s reporting is made possible by Report for America and the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

 ?? ALEX MARTIN/JOURNAL AND COURIER ?? Protesters set up an encampment protest April 26 at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.
ALEX MARTIN/JOURNAL AND COURIER Protesters set up an encampment protest April 26 at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind.

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