Profile: Universities must be open to free speech, says MyAV·¶ President and Provost
8 June 2021
Speakers on university campuses should not be cancelled because of protests, and universities must remain a place where people can speak their minds freely, says MyAV·¶ President and Provost Dr Michael Spence.
The head of one of Londonâs top universities said speakers should not be cancelled just because people protest about them and it is the job of universities to make people uncomfortable.
Dr Michael Spence, President and Provost of University College London also warned he is concerned at a growing trend where people say they feel âunsafeâ if somebody disagrees with them.
Speaking after new research found that more than half of people oppose speakers being âno-platformedâ at universities, he said people have forgotten how to âdisagree wellâ and many free speech problems could be solved by simple good manners.
He told the Evening Standard that he wants students to leave MyAV·¶ knowing that life is more nuanced than can be explained in a Tweet, and said the institutionâs job is to âmake everybody feel uncomfortable, to make everybody wonder if they are wrong. Thatâs the job of a university - thatâs how we progress.â
It comes after a study by the Policy Institute at Kingâs College London found that a quarter of people aged 16 to 24 supported âno-platforming.â But overall, 53 per cent of the public said that universities should expose students to all types of viewpoints.
Dr Spence said: âMy job is to make sure that the university remains a place where people can speak their mind freely. In an environment of rapidly changing values itâs easy for the conversation to become quite frenzied quite quickly. Itâs really important for universities to remain places where people can talk about difficult ideas â the new ideas and the old - in ways that remain civil.
He said he is concerned at a cultural shift that has seen people say âyou disagree with me and therefore I feel unsafe.â He said in some instances â when someone is threatening physical or emotional violence â that would be true, but he added: âWe have to be careful as a culture to make sure the mere fact that somebody disagrees with me doesnât make me unsafe.â
Former home secretary Amber Rudd is among the high profile names to be âno platformed.â An Oxford feminist society cancelled an event 30 minute before she was due to speak at the university in March last year after concerns were raised about her involvement in the Windrush scandal.
Dr Spence said nobody has been âcancelledâ at MyAV·¶, and he is proud that the Student Union has held debates on Israel Palestine with both Zionist and anti-Zionist speakers. A successful Womenâs Place UK conference was also held at the university â a group that campaigns for womenâs right but has been accused of transphobia. He said: âThere were protests and that was fine.â
He added: âPart of the day job of a university is to deal with protests. Thatâs what we do for our bread and butter.
âItâs only the point at which the protest means you canât speak or your event canât go ahead or you are physically intimidated when thereâs a problem.â
He said it would be âhopelessâ if universities enforced âtrigger warningsâ in lectures warning students they might be offended by some subjects. But he added that it is âjust plain courtesyâ for lecturers to tell pupils in advance if they are going to talk about sensitive material.
He said: âItâs only when these things become authoritarian that they become a problem. It sounds really naff but a huge amount of the stuff in this free speech area can be dealt with just with good manners. With remembering that ideas have consequences and there are other people who may be affected by the ideas. That doesnât stop you talking about them or expressing strong opinions but it does influence how you choose to talk about them.â
This article first appeared inÌęÌęon 08 June 2021.
Links
- Original article inÌę
- MyAV·¶ President and Provost
- Dr Michael Spenceâs biography
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- Dr Michael Spence