The University of New Brunswick in Canada appears to be standing behind a professor accused by another academic of racism and bad scholarship.
While academic freedom experts in the US and Canada agree the university did the right thing, the offended professor says the questionable comments merit no special protection.
At issue are a series of statements in which Ricardo Duchesne, a tenured professor of social science at New Brunswick, said that the city of Vancouver is essentially being ruined and becoming less 鈥淏ritish鈥 because of an influx of Asian immigrants.
In a statement this week, Robert MacKinnon, vice-president of New Brunswick鈥檚 Saint John campus, didn鈥檛 endorse Duchesne鈥檚 comments about the allegedly deleterious effect of Asian immigrants on Vancouver. But MacKinnon said that 鈥渁cademic freedom is a foundational principle of university life鈥. Often, he said, 鈥渟uch academic debate expresses views that may be perceived as controversial and unpopular鈥.
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MacKinnon continued: 鈥淭he university statement of mission and values very clearly supports the freedom of thought and expression while maintaining the highest ethical standards and a respectful environment.鈥
The vice-president鈥檚 remarks addressed a complaint levied against Duchesne last summer by Kerry Jang, a Vancouver city councillor and tenured professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia. In a June letter to New Brunswick president H.E.A. Campbell, Jang said he鈥檇 received emails and blog links from Duchesne in response to the Vancouver City Council鈥檚 recent, unanimous vote to research any discriminatory practice used by the city, such as limits on property rights or employment, throughout its history against Chinese residents.
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Jang said the content of the emails, which included links to Duchesne鈥檚 blog about protecting the interests of white Canadians, called Council of European Canadians, were 鈥渢roublesome in that they go beyond fair comment and abuse the privilege of academic freedom in their pejorative nature that is based on poor scholarship鈥. Jang also said he鈥檇 received 鈥渨hite supremacist鈥 emails from readers of Duchesne鈥檚 posts about the Vancouver City Council鈥檚 vote, which was part of a larger 鈥淵ear of Reconciliation鈥 with various Canadian ethnic groups.
Jang also wrote that he wanted the university to know that Duchesne sent the link to his blog postings 鈥渦sing his university affiliation鈥, through his university email account.
Duchesne allegedly first sent Jang and several other Asian-Canadian members of the city council an article he posted criticising the council鈥檚 reconciliation efforts and what he called 鈥渨hite guilt鈥. Jang wrote back, defending the council鈥檚 decision, saying 鈥渁n act of apology or acknowledgement is a way to help people heal and, most importantly, educates to ensure that as a society we don鈥檛 repeat the mistakes of the past鈥. Instead of responding directly, Jang said, Duchesne published parts of that email and made other comments about Asian Canadians.
Here鈥檚 part of Duchesne鈥檚 follow-up post, responding to Jang鈥檚 email: 鈥淲e are thus talking about a very powerful demographic group that also happens to be very wealthy with deep ingrained connections to Communist China. This group has been allowed to alter radically the formerly elegant, serene, community-oriented, British city of Vancouver, turning it into a loud, congested Asian city (still attractive only because of the architectural and institutional legacy of past white generations).鈥
MacKinnon in his statement said the university had addressed and carefully reviewed Jang鈥檚 complaint. It鈥檚 unclear how extensive the review was, or if it included Duchesne鈥檚 explicitly academic work, which challenges multiculturalist values among Western nations. A university spokeswoman said New Brunswick had no additional comment.
Duchesne defended his views in an interview with CBC News, saying, for example, that 鈥淪weden had practically no rape. Suddenly, they open their borders, they have one of the highest rape statistics in the world.鈥 It鈥檚 worth noting that such claims about Sweden - which were central to one party鈥檚 political campaign there in the 2010 elections - have been widely disputed as misleading and out of context.
But Duchesne said in an email that the matter with Jang 鈥渨as no big deal; a politician resurrected a complaint he made back in June, and the media picked up the same story again.鈥
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Jang said he was disappointed with the university鈥檚 statement, which appeared to sidestep some of the issues in his complaint. He said he didn鈥檛 think what he described as Duchesne鈥檚 personal, factually unsubstantiated thoughts should be protected by academic freedom.
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鈥淚f this is personal opinion, say that. Or if it鈥檚 part of your research, say that,鈥 Jang said. 鈥淏ut don鈥檛 masquerade and use academic freedom as a shield for your personal beliefs. 鈥cademic freedom only works if there鈥檚 good scholarship behind it.鈥
Jang said good scholarship means presenting opposing viewpoints and backing up assertions with evidence 鈥 a standard he said he holds himself to as an academic. He added: 鈥淎cademic freedom is being used cleverly by this guy to promote his own white supremacist views.鈥
David Robinson, executive director of the Canadian Association of University Teachers, said personal blogs touching on academic issues do fall into a 鈥済rey area鈥 of academic freedom, but that the university appeared to have acted correctly in Duchesne鈥檚 case.
鈥淭his was investigated last summer, when the university said it was going to do a review, and faculty members who did the review found nothing鈥 meriting disciplinary action, Robinson said. He added that while Duchesne鈥檚 comments would be 鈥渄eeply offensive鈥 to most people, 鈥渋f we banned people making comments publicly about anything controversial, we鈥檇 have a pretty empty blogosphere and media鈥.
Robinson noted that Canada also has a law against hate speech, and that Duchesne鈥檚 comments don鈥檛 appear to meet that bar since no criminal investigation has been launched against him.
The American Association of University Professors also defends faculty members鈥 right to comment on matters of 鈥減ublic concern鈥. At the same time, its Statement on Extramural Utterances says that complaints can be levied against professors who appear to fail to be accurate, exercise 鈥渁ppropriate restraint鈥, show respect for others or stress that they are not speaking for the university, and whose fitness to serve is in question. Such complaints must be adjudicated by a faculty body, according to AAUP guidelines.
Nevertheless, John K. Wilson, an academic freedom expert and co-editor of the blog, said that, essentially, 鈥渆verything is covered by academic freedom鈥.
The question in Duchesne鈥檚 case is whether his posts are extramural utterances, 鈥渨hich get a higher level of protection because they鈥檙e not part of someone鈥檚 work鈥. Wilson said the posts appear to be just that, part of a 鈥減ersonal blog sent to politicians to express a political viewpoint鈥.
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Wilson added: 鈥淚f academic freedom doesn鈥檛 protect that right of professors to express their views to public officials, then it wouldn鈥檛 cover much of anything.鈥
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