Plus: An academic-freedom showdown in Indiana. ADVERTISEMENT [The Review Logo]( You can also [read this newsletter on the web](. Or, if you no longer want to receive this newsletter, [unsubscribe](. The abrupt [resignation]( last week of Nemat (Minouche) Shafik from the presidency of Columbia University gratified two otherwise opposed camps. For the New York congresswoman Elise Stefanik, Shafikâs head joins Claudine Gayâs and Liz Magillâs, one more trophy in her hunting lodge: âTHREE DOWN, so many to go,â she [tweeted](. For the Columbia law professor Katherine Franke, whose statement on Democracy Now about the threat supposedly posed by Israeli students was the subject of some of Stefanikâs interrogation, the former president got her just comeuppance: âPresident Minouche Shafik threw me under the bus when she testified before Congress,â Franke [tweeted]( âbut Iâm still an employee of Columbia University. Sheâs not.â Shafikâs performance during the congressional hearing in April was widely perceived as disastrous. âIt was shocking,â as Louis Menand wrote in The New Yorker, âto hear her negotiating with a member of Congress over disciplining two members of her own faculty, by name, for things they had written or said.â (Besides Franke, the other faculty member was Joseph Massad, who had [celebrated]( October 7 as âinnovative Palestinian resistanceâ in The Electronic Intifada.) Why didnât Shafik simply say she couldnât comment publicly on personnel matters? And why did she fail to mention academic freedom, even once? Her cringing posture of appeasement before her inquisitors felt almost indecent to watch. âAcademic freedomâ did make it into Shafikâs letter of resignation, which calls it Columbiaâs âNorth Star,â alongside âfree speech; openness to ideas; and zero tolerance for discrimination of any kind.â That was salutary, even if her formulaic prose doesnât convey entire conviction. Shafikâs successor will, with luck, entertain a more robust and principled sense of the universityâs mission. It may be true that everything is ultimately a question of politics. But not everything is a question of the degraded partisan politics represented by the Congressional hearings on antisemitism to which Shafik so readily succumbed. Her refusal to muster any compelling principled defense of academic freedom in that persecutory setting may not have saved her her job â but then, neither did her acquiescence. Speaking of academic freedom, Indiana University and Purdue University are involved in an interesting legal case regarding SEA 202, an Indiana bill mandating âintellectual diversityâ in public colleges. As Steve Sanders, a law professor at Indiana University at Bloomington, [explains]( a group of IU and Purdue faculty members, backed by the American Civil Liberties Union, allege that the law violates their First Amendment rights. âIU and Purdue are defendants (since their boards of trustees must enforce the law), but the [attorney generalâs] office was allowed under federal procedure to intervene as an additional defendant, since the constitutionality of a state statute is being challenged.â SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Enjoying the newsletter? [Subscribe today]( for unlimited access to essential news, analysis, and advice. Hereâs where things get interesting. Todd Rokita, Indianaâs attorney general, filed a legal brief asserting not only that the case is premature (because no faculty member can yet show that their speech has been curtailed) but also that no First Amendment right to classroom speech exists. Thatâs the theory â held by Ron DeSantis, among others â that public-college faculty are vessels of âgovernment speech.â According to Rokita, âAny speech pursuant to the teacherâs âofficial dutiesâ and âprofessional responsibilitiesâ is subject to state direction.â As Smith writes, âUnder this theory, taken to its logical conclusion, faculty members with advanced credentials and years of training could be reduced to ventriloquist dummies for whatever political faction happens to wield power on a university board of trustees or in the state house.â In defending this idea, Rokita draws on the 2006 Supreme Court case Garcetti v. Ceballos, which I [wrote about]( last year. Garcetti was not about higher education, and Justice Anthony Kennedy, in his majority opinion, expressly refrains from making a call about faculty speech: âWe need not, and for that reason do not, decide whether the analysis we conduct today would apply in the same manner to a case involving speech related to scholarship and teaching.â But those concerned about the future of academic freedom have long worried that it contains a significant threat. At first, as Sanders writes, âIndiana University and Purdue University allowed their lawyers last month to âembraceâ and âjoin inââ to the entirety of Rokitaâs brief â including its theory that classroom teaching is government speech. Most of Sandersâs essay is devoted to criticizing IUâs and Purdueâs legal teams for co-signing a brief that would, if its arguments were accepted, evacuate academic freedom entirely. âThe arguments in the Rokita brief are completely irreconcilable with [IUâs own clear academic-freedom policy]( as endorsed by the trustees,â Sanders observes. IUâs policy insists that âThe teacher shall have full freedom of instruction, subject to adequate fulfillment of other academic duties. No limitation shall be placed upon the teacherâs freedom of exposition of the subject in the classroom or on the expression of it outside.â Three days after Sanders published his critique, the lawyers changed their tune. In a â[supplemental notice]( they clarified that they endorse only Rokitaâs arguments about the prematurity of the plaintiffâs complain, but not his arguments about the absence of First Amendment protections for faculty speech in the classroom. ADVERTISEMENT Upcoming Workshop [The Chronicle's Crash Course in Academic Leadership | August 2024] If you’re curious about becoming an academic administrator, we’re once again offering The Chronicle’s Academic Leadership Crash Course, a four-hour virtual workshop designed for faculty aspiring to administrative roles. Join us in August to gain essential insights, practical tips, and valuable resources that will help you pursue your next professional step. [Learn more and register!]( The Latest THE REVIEW | ESSAY [An Anthropologistâs Reach Exceeds His Grasp]( By Jacob Mikanowski [STORY IMAGE]( Harvey Whitehouseâs overambitious new book. ADVERTISEMENT [An Anthropologistâs Reach Exceeds His Grasp]( THE REVIEW | OPINION [Why an Outsider Is the Right Choice to Be UNCâs Chancellor]( By Peter Hans [STORY IMAGE]( Opposition to the appointment of Lee Roberts ignores the current reality. 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