Cambridge University Press is to reinstate hundreds of articles about politically sensitive topics that it removed from the website of one of its journals in China under government pressure.
The editor of the periodical,聽China Quarterly, said in a statement that the publisher had made the U-turn after a 鈥渏ustifiably intense reaction from the global academic community鈥.
The University of Cambridge, of which the Press is part, said the rethink聽followed a review by "the academic leadership of the university".
颁鲍笔听removed 315 articles聽from the website of China Quarterly in China because an agency of the communist government threatened to pull all of the publisher's content if it did not comply.
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The journal articles and book reviews in question covered issues that Beijing deems politically sensitive, such as the Tiananmen Square protests, Tibet and Taiwan, published between the 1960s and recent months.
CUP has faced considerable criticism for its decision to remove the articles. Hundreds of academics signed a petition calling for a boycott of CUP journals. One academic wrote an open letter saying that the move was 鈥渟hameful鈥 and violated academic independence.
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In his statement,聽China Quarterly聽editor Tim Pringle,聽senior lecturer in labour, social movements and development at Soas, University of London, said he had been informed following a meeting with CUP that the publisher "intended to repost immediately the articles removed from its website in China".
He added that the publisher had initially taken down the articles without the consent of the journal.
鈥淚 would like to express my support for CUP鈥檚 decision to repost the articles. It comes after a justifiably intense reaction from the global academic community and beyond,鈥 Dr Pringle said.
鈥淎ccess to published materials of the highest quality is a core component of scholarly research. It is not the role of respected global publishing houses such as CUP to hinder such access."
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In a statement, a University of Cambridge spokesman said that the decision to block content "was taken as a temporary measure pending discussion with the academic leadership of the University of Cambridge, and pending a scheduled meeting with the Chinese importer in Beijing".
"The academic leadership of the university has now reviewed this action in advance of the meeting in China later this week," the spokesman said.聽
鈥淎cademic freedom is the overriding principle on which the University of Cambridge is based. Therefore, while this temporary decision was taken in order to protect short-term access in China to the vast majority of the Press鈥 journal articles, the university鈥檚 academic leadership and the Press have agreed to reinstate the blocked content, with immediate effect, so as to uphold the principle of academic freedom on which the university鈥檚 work is founded.鈥
Dr Pringle said that China Quarterly will continue to publish articles that make it through the 鈥渞igorous, double-blind peer review regardless of topic or sensitivity鈥. The journal's publication criteria 鈥 scientific rigour and contributing to knowledge about China 鈥 will not change, he added.
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