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[UPDATED] University of Dayton administration canceled UN special rapporteurās COVID-19 speech over views on reproductive health

University of Dayton issued a statement that it had unilaterally disinvited Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng ā United Nations special rapporteur on the right to health ā from speaking because her views are āinconsistent with the Universityās Catholic, Marianist mission and identity.ā (CiEll / Shutterstock.com)
Last October, the University of Daytonās Human Rights Center that Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng, United Nations , had been invited to speak about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on human rights at the centerās biennial conference. Soon enough, her name and bio were quietly scrubbed from the after the universityās administration unilaterally canceled her appearance, citing her ābackground and work related to reproduction.ā Yesterday, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS called on the University of Dayton to reaffirm its commitment to protect freedom of expression ā because canceling Mofokengās speech isnāt consistent with that commitment.
Disinvited for views 'inconsistent' with universityās mission
UDās Human Rights Center ā which is run by with the to create a āpositive change through research, education and dialogueā about human rights ā planned to host its biennial conference in December, focusing on challenges and opportunities the pandemic has created for human rights advocacy. Mofokeng, one of three invited keynote speakers, anticipated āCovidās impact on human rightsā ā which she is ādetermined less by biological factors and more by public health policy, leadership, socioeconomic inequality, systemic racism and structural discrimination.ā The center also invited professor to speak about , and , a dissident from Hong Kong, to speak about pro-democracy activism.
But Mofokengās invitation to appear would be short-lived, because administrators objected to her views.
On Oct. 11, several weeks after the Human Rights Center Mofokengās appearance, UDās administration the centerās leadership to āstand by and wait to hearā as administrators considered disinviting Mofokeng. Weeks later, the censors came to a decision. The administration that it had unilaterally disinvited Mofokeng from the conference, because Mofokengās āāābackground and work related to reproduction is inconsistent with the Universityās Catholic, Marianist mission and identity.ā
There would be no barrier to the universityās administration simply saying as much ā criticism, after all, isnāt censorship. But disinvitations by administrators do constitute censorship. They also violate UDās longstanding affirmative promises that its students and faculty enjoy expressive rights, including that made through the universityās the , which guarantees faculty āfull freedomā in teaching, research, and extramural expression.
University of Dayton must recommit to the principles that in the future it will not disinvite speakers based on viewpoint and will protect faculty academic freedom.
This commitment, at its core, denies administrators the authority to limit expressive activity on the basis that speech or a speaker is morally objectionable. Itās a recognition that students and faculty can learn from people who hold or express views objectionable to other members of the community, and that permitting someone to speak doesnāt mean their views are endorsed by the institution. In many respects, itās a sign of confidence that the views of the institution, or of the majority, will withstand criticism or countervailing views.
In other words, institutions that commit to expressive freedom canāt then grant themselves the authority to break that promise whenever speech is contrary to their own views.
Yet, this is exactly what UD did by disinviting Mofokeng. That is why Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote UD yesterday explaining that the university contravened its academic freedom promises by disinviting a faculty-invited speaker solely based on her viewpoint.
As we said in our letter:
That Mofokeng may hold viewpoints that some, including administrators, may find objectionable is not a principled basis to bar faculty from hearing her speak. This is pointedly so where the anticipated topic of her speech appears unrelated to the views that administrators find objectionable. In blocking Mofokeng from speaking about COVID-19-related health issues because of opposition to her stances on other issues, UD restricted its faculty membersā rights to contribute to free and open dialogue on campus.
Disinvitation of speakers because of their views ā motivated either by anticipation that they will air those views or by the fact that they simply hold them ā isnāt limited to a particular political affiliation. Indeed, at about the same time that UDās administration deliberated whether (or how) to disinvite Mofokeng, MIT weathered a whirlwind of criticism for disinviting Dorian Abbot from a talk about climate science because of his unrelated on diversity, equity, and inclusion. In 2019, the University of Northwestern denied the funding request of its Young Americans for Freedom student chapter to host conservative columnist Star Parker, based in part on Parkerās pro-life viewpoints. Also in 2019, John Carroll University canceled a student-organized drag show to avoid ādivisivenessā on campus. In each of these cases, in an effort to prevent disruption and disagreement, university administrators instead stifled protected expression, including expression related to contested political and ideological matters ā exactly the kind of debate that should be encouraged on a universityās campus.
(¹ó±õøé·”ās disinvitation database tracked 26 speakers in 2021, from all ideological viewpoints, who were disinvited from appearing on college campuses.)
As we said in our letter (with links added):
These principles have protected the right to invite speakers who offer dissenting, unorthodox, or controversial views. These include including , , , , those who had about suspected āCommunist or subversive connections,ā those or crimes of moral turpitude, of the overthrow of the government, advocates of the āOccupyā movement, and, perhaps most controversially, .
By unilaterally disinviting Mofokeng, UD not only prevented Mofokeng from speaking but also infringed on the right of the universityās students and faculty to listen. As Justice Thurgood Marshall aptly observed, āThe freedom to speak and the freedom to hear are inseparable; they are two sides of the same coin.ā This freedom isnāt subject to moral litmus tests.
The conference is over, and UD canāt unring the bell. But it is now incumbent on its administration to make clear to faculty that the universityās promises to protect freedom of expression actually mean something. Otherwise, what good are they in the first place? UD must recommit to the principles that in the future it will not disinvite speakers based on viewpoint and will protect faculty academic freedom.
UPDATE (Feb. 15, 2022): On February 10, UD responded to Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās letter, arguing that it canceled its faculty membersā invitation of Dr. Mofokeng because of her work as an abortion provider, not because of her viewpoints, and seeking a correction to that effect ā while otherwise failing to respond to the central point of our letter regarding the universityās interference with academic freedom. Compounding its error, UDās administration also asserts that its censorship is justified by faculty membersā failure to inform the administration of invited speakers in advance ā suggesting that UD subjects speakers to prior restraint, the āmost serious and least tolerable infringementā on expressive rights. The āclarificationā UD offered, and asks Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS to accept, is a distinction without a difference, and raises new concerns about the extent to which the universityās administrationās fidelity to the expressive rights it promises is unserious. As we explained in a follow-up letter to the university, āUD plainly believes that Dr. Mofokengās ābackground and work related to reproductionā implies a certain viewpoint regarding abortionā that UDās administration ā again, overruling its faculty members ā did not want represented at the conference. Given the inadequacy of the response offered by UDās administration, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS renews its call for UD to reaffirm and recommit to its promises of free expression and academic freedom by making clear that it will not disinvite or exercise prior review of student- or faculty-invited speakers.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS defends the rights of students and faculty members ā no matter their views ā at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, submit your case to Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS today. If youāre faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533).
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