Calls by Italy鈥檚 far-right governing party for a book about it to be removed from a university reading list have been met with limited resistance, Italian academics have warned, opening the door for further attacks on academic freedom in the future.
Last month, a regional branch of the League, part of Italy鈥檚 governing coalition and currently the country鈥檚 most popular party, demanded the removal of La聽Lega di聽Salvini from the reading list of a course taught by a political science professor at the University of Bologna.
The branch objected to the book鈥檚 description of the party as 鈥渆xtreme right鈥 and to its criticisms of Matteo Salvini, the party鈥檚 leader and Italy鈥檚 deputy prime minister.
Academics have a duty of loyalty to the state, and universities should not be places of political 鈥減ropaganda鈥, in the Emilia-Romagna regional assembly.
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Gianluca Passarelli, a political scientist at Sapienza University of Rome and co-author of the book, told 探花视频 that his biggest surprise had been how little reaction there had been in Italy to such an attack.
鈥淔rom a media point of view, there has been no attention,鈥 he said.
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The book, published in September 2018, draws on surveys and policy documents to examine the party, which entered government last June in coalition alongside the anti-establishment Five Star Movement.
In a sense, the book鈥檚 content is 鈥渜uite banal鈥, Dr Passarelli said, because calling the League 鈥渆xtreme right鈥 was hardly controversial in academic literature and was something that the authors had done before in previous research.
鈥淭he fact that they tried to silence our book meant that they鈥o not accept their identity,鈥 he said. Dr Passarelli added that the incident illustrated that the League was attempting to 鈥渄eny the freedom of research鈥.
The League鈥檚 attack on the book was 鈥渨orrying鈥, said Andrea Mammone, a history lecturer at Royal Holloway, University of London and a commentator on Italy鈥檚 far right. It was 鈥渙ne of the first times that someone is challenging an academic book鈥, he said. 鈥淭hey are actually criticising researchers鈥hey want to shut down opinions.鈥
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Whether the League would continue to attack academic research 鈥渄epends on the reaction of society and mainstream politics鈥, Professor Mammone said. 鈥淔or me, there was not enough reaction.鈥
Despite the League鈥檚 objections, Dr Passarelli鈥檚 book has remained on the reading list. There have been no further developments since the initial attack, a University of Bologna spokesman said. Nor has the Italian government enacted any concrete policies to limit academic freedom, said Professor Mammone. The country鈥檚 Ministry of Education, Universities and Research is led by an independent, Marco Bussetti.
But Mr Salvini has stoked anti-academic sentiment by repeatedly disparaging the professoroni: know-it-all, elitist experts who, he claims, oppose his policies. 鈥淚鈥檓 worried about their overall approach,鈥 Professor Mammone said, because the League sees academic freedom as a 鈥渓eftist bastion鈥.
鈥淭he Italian academy is strong,鈥 said Dr Passarelli. 鈥淲e are not scared of the League, frankly. The problem is that they do not like universities. They assume that we are lazy, that we do not do anything鈥 and 鈥渄o not produce anything useful to the country鈥, he warned.
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League representatives did not respond to a request for comment.
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