The Future of Academic Freedom
Description:... At the bottom of every controversy embroiling the university today - from debates over hate-speech codes to the reorganization of the academy as a multicultural institution - is the concept of academic freedom. But academic freedom is almost never mentioned in these debates. Now nine leading academics consider the problems confronting the American university in terms of their effect on the future of academic freedom. Whom and what does academic freedom protect? Are restrictions on hate speech compatible with the academic freedom of inquiry? Must academic freedom have epistemological foundations, or should it be reconceived as an ethical practice? If the American university is now undergoing a radical reorganization, both intellectual and economic, what are the threats to the freedoms of inquiry and expression that professors and students have traditionally taken for granted? Some of these writers have taken leading roles in debates over the university and its future; others enter those debates for the first time. All have been instrumental in the intellectual development of their own disciplines. They were invited by the American Association of University Professors to reflect on the future of academic freedom in light of the social and intellectual condition of the university today, and the result is an extraordinarily wide-ranking discussion of the real stakes in the controversy over higher learning in America. The essays respond to critics of the university, but they also respond to one another: Rorty and Haskell argue about the epistemological foundations of academic freedom; Gates and Sunstein discuss the legal and educational logic of speech codes. But in the end the volume achieves an unexpected consensus about the need to reconceive the concept of academic freedom in order to meet the threats and risks of the future. -- from dust jacket.
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