A national help desk for academics facing harassment because of聽their work has been launched in聽the Netherlands, raising hopes that by聽handling complaints collectively the authorities will be able to聽respond better.
The SafeScience are designed to聽help academics get support from their institution within one working day if聽they are threatened, intimidated or聽abused because of聽their teaching, research or聽outreach activities. They can also call a聽24-hour number in聽emergencies.
Launched in early November by Universities of the Netherlands (UNL), the Dutch Research Council and the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, the service had already received nine reports at the time of writing.
鈥淪cientists fulfil a crucial social function. It is unacceptable that they should be confronted with threats, intimidation and hate reactions in their work,鈥 said UNL president Pieter Duisenberg. 鈥淥ur democratic values will be affected if this prevents scientists from participating in the public debate.鈥
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Anti-intellectual intimidation has been growing in range and severity in the Netherlands in recent years. The radical right party Forum for Democracy launched its own hotline in 2019 to report supposed left-wing 鈥渋ndoctrination鈥 by university lecturers.
In 2021, the group Vizier Op聽Links (Sights on the Left) began targeting public figures on the left by posting stickers at their homes saying 鈥淭his location is being watched鈥.
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Meanwhile, the pandemic prompted a broader anti-authoritarian pushback against lockdowns and vaccination, some of which has targeted academics.
Roland Pierik, professor of legal philosophy at Maastricht University, faced a deluge of threats after his support for mandatory vaccination attracted the ire of Willem Engel, an activist and founder of Viruswaanzin (Virus Madness).
Professor Pierik said the new helpline might help universities and authorities to identify repeat offenders.
鈥淭here might only be a few people in the Netherlands who do this [harassment], and if all the complaints go to the same place, they could realise it鈥檚 the same person. Adding up all those different threats could make a stronger case for the police,鈥 he said.
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Aside from the practical benefits, a high-profile national effort can help to soften the emotional toll of harassment, Professor Pierik added. 鈥淭hen it鈥檚 less personal. If you can contact an organisation that鈥檚 focused on this, then it鈥檚 not only about me, but it goes back to the system again. I聽think that鈥檚 very good.鈥
Many universities in the Netherlands have assembled teams that include security, human resources, legal and communications staff to assist academics in the event of harassment. Professor Pierik said the University of Amsterdam, his old employer, had developed support early聽because former colleagues researching far-right parties were being regularly harassed. Maastricht was now doing the same, he added.
鈥淭hey can tell you what to do, so you don鈥檛 have to reinvent the wheel, and they support you morally and practically, if聽needed. They help you find and pay for a lawyer, and that takes away most of the stress you have,鈥 he said.
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