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Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS on ICE policy: Requiring students to return to unfree countries will import censorship to American classrooms

MIT (pictured) and Harvard filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (Travel_Adventure/Shutterstock.com)
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement last week that international students will be required to leave the country if their classes are held entirely online this fall, a measure some universities are adopting as COVID-19 continues to spread. Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology quickly a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and ICE challenging the policy. This lawsuit has been followed by five others, filed by the , the , , a in Los Angeles, and .
Today, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS filed an in the lawsuit brought by Harvard and MIT, which asks a federal court to prevent the federal government from implementing the ICE policy.
As we explain in our brief, that policy will return students to countries that actively suppress speech, effectively removing their voices from classes in which they are ostensibly enrolled:
Some 1.1 million international students attend American universities and colleges. Of these, approximately 502,470 students originate fromāand will presumably return toārepressive states where the government blocks or filters online communication, forces the removal of certain online content, or punishes online expression by banning āfake news,ā blasphemy, or insults to state institutions or officials.
The lionās share of these studentsāsome 370,000āhail from the Peopleās Republic of China, the nation rated by Freedom House as āthe worldās worst abuser of internet freedomā for four consecutive years. An additional 6,917 students originate fromāand would presumably attend virtual classes fromāHong Kong, where expressive rights are rapidly deteriorating as the Chinese Communist Party imposes the āGreat Firewallā to suppress its critics. ICEās policy requires those students to study under the watchful eye of the Chinese governmentās sophisticated regime of internet censorship and surveillance. This system denies internet users access to material required for basic academic discussions. Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS studying remotely from China will, for example, be barred from discussing historical accounts of the Tiananmen Square massacre or Chinaās current use of concentration camps.
While China represents the most dramatic threatāin both size and sophisticationāto studentsā expressive rights, it is not the only such actor. Some 10,000 students could return to Turkey, where political speech, including criticism of President Erdogan, can lead to prison, and where universities have been purged of dissenting academics. Othersālike nearly 8,000 students from Pakistanāmay return to states where āblasphemousā speech may be met with state-sanctioned or extrajudicial death.
And the policy has the potential to impact more than just students. Faculty, too, could feel the effects as they face the choice of continuing to teach material that could result in studentsā removal from class or, at worst, legal peril. Faculty might reasonably avoid such discussions to ensure students are kept in class and out of trouble, harming the education of domestic and international students alike.
, , and from around the United States have expressed increasing concerns in recent years about the potential impact Chinese government-led censorship could have on American classrooms. ICEās policy, which would force U.S. universities to continue classes behind Chinaās Great Firewall, would serve to exacerbate those challenges, and increase the likelihood that students and educators will continue their studies behind a veil of self-censorship. The certainty that ICEās policy will have the effect of enabling foreign censorship in American classrooms will result in precisely the āpall of orthodoxyā our constitutional system seeks to avoid.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS would like to express its gratitude to our local counsel, attorney of , for his assistance in filing our .
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