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Article
Civility and Academic Freedom: Who Defines the Former (and How) May Imperil Rights to the Latter
College Quarterly
  • Theodore W. McDonald, Boise State University
  • James D. Stockton, Boise State University
  • R. Eric Landrum, Boise State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Abstract

An alarming occurrence in academia involves the discipline of faculty, under the guise of violating civility or collegiality codes, for engaging in what should be protected academic free speech. This often occurs when unprincipled and/or corporate-minded administrators seek to punish or dissuade faculty from challenging or questioning their decisions or policy initiatives, or for speaking up about policy violations or lack of due process. The ambiguity of terms such as civility and collegiality, when selectively defined by administrators, can be used to stifle, dissuade or punish academic free speech. Ways to identify and address these problems are presented.

Copyright Statement

This document was originally published in College Quarterly by Seneca Press. Copyright restrictions may apply.

Citation Information
Theodore W. McDonald, James D. Stockton and R. Eric Landrum. "Civility and Academic Freedom: Who Defines the Former (and How) May Imperil Rights to the Latter" College Quarterly (2018)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/eric_landrum/138/