The Scotsman

Censorship on campus drives creation of new website

● Edinburgh pair found platform to offer space for students to express opinions

- By SCOTT MACNAB

A growing “crisis” over campus censorship at Edinburgh University is driving the success of a new free speech platform where nothing is off-limits, according to the two students who founded it.

The Broad website has been launched to counter the emergence of “no platformin­g” and “safe space” initiative­s which have hit university societies and speakers which are deemed unpalatabl­e in controvers­ial areas such as abortion or immigratio­n.

It was founded by politics student Joe Kleeman, 19, and Oliver Kraftman, 20, who studies politics and economics.

In the space of a few months the pair have recruited a team of eight editorial staff as articles flooded in, mainly from fellow Edinburgh students, but also elsewhere around the UK, reflecting widespread frustratio­n over what is perceived as the growing climate of “campus censorship”.

Mr Kleeman said: “There isn’t really a space for students to express their opinions and we want to make a positive difference to that.”

The use of policies like “noplatform­ing”, “safe spaces” and “trigger warnings” stemmed from a desire to deny exposure to extremist figures,

0 The Broad co-founder Joe Kleeman and editor-in-chief Helena Irvine but there are widespread concerns it is now being used to choke off debate on campuses.

Tory MP Jacob Rees-mogg was caught up in a fracas when he was targeted by a no platformin­g protest at the University of the West of England earlier this year as he gave a speech to the internatio­nal relations society.

Edinburgh has been ranked as one of the worst universiti­es in the UK for free speech by the online magazine Spiked. The university was also at the centre of controvers­y two years ago when students were banned from dressing as Pocahontas and Caitlyn Jenner, amid fears it could be see as racist or transphobi­c.

A row broke out last week after it emerged that male students were to be banned from a debate on feminism promoted by the university’s philosophy society. It later distanced itself from the event.

The Broad has already faced its own brush with such campus attitudes when a proposed debate on “political correctnes­s” which it was proposing to jointly stage fell by wayside amid concerns it would be too controvers­ial.

Mrkleemans­aid:“youdosee events getting cancelled, people getting `no platformed’. I think a lot of students at Edinburgh feel very entitled – entitled not to be exposed to a certain opinion. Maybe that came with students having to pay fees now of £9,250 a year and they feel like consumers.”

Edinburgh University Students Associatio­n has previously insisted it “wholeheart­edly” supports free speech, pointing to a broad range of debates on campus covering areas including the Middle East and Brexit.

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