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Emerson still ākinda susā on free speech ā so weāve alerted their accreditor

Emerson College student Sam Neves stands in front of a mobile billboard that criss-crossed Boston earlier this year to call out Emersonās attempts to censor and squelch free expression on campus. Neves is president of Emersonās Turning Point USA chapter that was punished for passing out stickers featuring a hammer and sickle with the caption āCHINA KINDA SUSā ā slang for āsuspicious.ā
In the 15 months of continued and wide-ranging censorship at Emerson College, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS has written six letters, covered the controversy eight times here on Newsdesk, , and launched a campaign on the streets of Boston complete with a roving billboard truck notifying students that Emersonās free speech promises are ākinda sus.ā
Now, weāre going even bigger by filing a complaint this week with its academic accreditor, the New England Commission of Higher Education, shining a spotlight on Emersonās poor treatment of the student chapter of Turning Point USA and the general sorry state of student expression on the collegeās Boston campus. The complaint marks the latest in a long line of attempts by Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS to get Emerson to live up to the free expression it makes to students.
Emerson has never responded directly to us, in any manner or forum, to defend its actions or to contest our claims.
Our complaint alleges Emerson is out of compliance with the NECHEās , which requires accredited institutions to be ācommitted to the free pursuit and dissemination of knowledge,ā and to assure āfaculty and students the freedom to teach and study, to examine all pertinent data, to question assumptions, and to be guided by the evidence of scholarly research.ā
As we wrote in our complaint:
The Commissionās Standard 9.3 is one of the strongest protections for student and faculty expression at private institutions in the United States. For accreditation to mean something, institutions must take these requirements seriously and clear departures from these standards must be enforced. Emersonās refusal to bring its conduct in line with Standard 9.3 despite repeated efforts at resolution merits the Commissionās attention in the same way that other accrediting bodies have taken action against institutions for departing from a commitment to freedom of expression.
We cited precedent set by other accreditors who have taken action against institutions for failing to live up to accreditation standards. One such accreditor, the Higher Learning Commission, Southwest Baptist University on probation for failing to comply with, among other things, a requirement to be ācommitted to academic freedom and freedom of expression in the pursuit of truth in teaching and learning.ā Another, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, an investigation into Mount St. Maryās University in 2016 for the schoolās apparent breach of several of the commissionās standards, including standards regarding leadership and governance, integrity, student admissions and retention, and faculty.

Emerson College investigates, suspends conservative student group for stickers criticizing Chinaās government
Press Release
Weāre hoping to prompt a similar response here. Emersonās mistreatment of TPUSA dates back more than a year. In September 2021, the school suspended and investigated the student group for distributing āChina Kinda Susā stickers on campus, eventually placing a āFormal Warningā on the groupās record ā despite Emerson acknowledging there was no evidence the group intended to target anyone for criticism other than Chinaās government. This caused a snowball effect whereby the collegeās administration subsequently derecognized the group for being unable to obtain a new faculty advisor after their previous one stepped away in the wake of the collegeās accusation that the group promoted āanti-Asian bigotry.ā
Emerson didnāt stop there. In previously unpublicized incidents, an administrator, citing two ācivilityā policies, denied a TPUSA student memberās attempt to post flyers on campus responding to a student newspaper op-ed critical of TPUSA. Administrators also stopped the group during the past two months from promoting two documentary screenings: One, a from CBS News about free speech on college campuses, detailed a TPUSA student memberās experience at Emerson. The other was commentator Matt Walshās āWhat Is A Woman?ā documentary. Though the events eventually proceeded, the group was unable to promote them.
Now, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS is turning to NECHE to hold Emerson accountable. In June, we filed a similar complaint with the Middle States Commission on Higher Education concerning Saint Vincent Collegeās to have its president and cabinet review all college-sponsored speakers invited to campus. Filing accreditor complaints is a measure we take very rarely, but we take this step here after exhausting other forms of both public and private advocacy in our lengthy uphill battle to get Emerson to respect free expression. Disturbingly, in all this time, Emerson has never responded directly to us, in any manner or forum, to defend its actions or to contest our claims.
However, in the course of the schoolās ongoing presidential search, it has publicly stated any new president must appreciate ādiverse ideas and the free expression of them.ā We certainly hope the new president will, or the school may end up a repeat offender on our list of the 10 worst colleges for free speech.
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