Posts Tagged ‘Academic freedom’
May 27, 2016
Attacks on higher education threaten the safety and well-being of scholars, administrators, staff and students; undermine academic work and instruction; and deny everyone the benefits of expert knowledge and scientific and creative progress. Too often such attacks go unreported. Scholars at Risk (SAR) publishes an Academic Freedom Monitor which tracks key attacks with the aims of protecting vulnerable individuals, promoting accountability and preventing future violations. In the period February – April 2016 SAR reports 20 incidents:
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Tags: Academic freedom, anniversary, Bangladesh, Canada, Human Rights Defenders, human rights monitoring, India, Kuwait, Malaysia, meeting, Montreal, Nigeria, repression, Scholars at Risk, Sudan, Swaziland, Turkey, Venezuela
June 23, 2015

“Attacks on higher education are at crisis levels”
Today, 23 June 2015, Scholars at Risk [SAR] released the first report of its Academic Freedom Monitoring Project at the United Nations in Geneva,: “Free to Think”. The culmination of four years of monitoring and analysis by SAR staff and researchers around the world, the report analyzes 333 attacks on higher education communities in 65 countries from January 2011 to May 2015, demonstrating the pressing need to raise awareness and document attacks on higher education: Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in books, human rights, Human Rights Defenders | 3 Comments »
Tags: Academic freedom, Free to Think, freedom, Higher education, Human Rights Defenders, human rights documentation, report, Robert Quinn, SAR, Scholars at Risk, university level education
April 27, 2015
Since November 2014, student organizations including the All Burma Federation of Student Union (ABFSU) have been protesting against the National Education Bill, which student activists claim restricts academic freedom. Enacted by Parliament on 30 September 2014, the National Education Law was intended to reform the country’s education system, but the ABFSU claim the government did not seek adequate student input in its formation. The new restrictions outlaw independent student and teacher unions, and erase ethnic languages, cultures and literatures from university syllabi.
Students opposed to the National Education Law staged a peaceful protest in Letpadan on 10 March 2015. Police responded violently to the movement. They arrested approximately 126 students, including student leaders Po Po, Nanda Sitt Aung and Phyo Phyo Aung. Three others, Myat Thu Aung, Kyaw Ko Ko (the Chairman) and Ye Yint Kyaw (spokesperson), managed to escape in March, but today they face criminal charges of unlawful assembly, rioting, incitement, and causing harm to a public servant. The charges carry penalties of up to three years in prison. Robert San Aung, who leads the Myanmar Lawyers’ Network team and is one the 3 Final Nominees of the MEA this year, said he believes the Court would not begin hearing the charges against those students currently detained, until police had apprehended those still in hiding.
The ABFSU is a student union with a long tradition and as far back as 2001 it won the Norwegian Student Peace Prize.
Myanmar/Burma – Student human rights defenders Myat Thu Aung, Kyaw Ko Ko and Ye Yint Kyaw facing charges | Front Line Defenders.
Posted in Front Line, human rights, Human Rights Defenders | Leave a Comment »
Tags: ABFSU, Academic freedom, All Burma Federation of Student Union, Burma, Education, Final Nominee MEA 2015, freedom to demonstrate, Kyaw Ko Ko, Myanmar, Myat Thu Aung, Robert San Aung, students, Ye Yint Kyaw
September 26, 2013
The Scholars at Risk Network invites submissions for the Winter 2013 edition of University Values: a global bulletin on academic freedom, and the first of its kind around the world. Previous editions of the bulletin can be viewed at: http://www.scholarsatrisk.nyu.edu/Workshop/bulletin.php
University Values is an electronic bulletin featuring articles, essays, opinion pieces and announcements promoting discussion and understanding of university values, including values of access, accountability, academic freedom, autonomy and social responsibility.
Submission Requirements
Length: short articles of 500-700 words maximum.
Topic: on an academic freedom related issue of your choice. The article could, alternatively, contain news on important events, situations emerging in your region or specific countries or urgent appeals for scholars or universities in distress.
Deadline: November 11, 2013.
Contact: submit articles by email to scholarsatrisk@nyu.edu. Enter “University Values Submission” in the subject line of your email.
The University Values Editing Committee will select up to six articles for publication in the bulletin. For more information about Scholars at Risk visit http://scholarsatrisk.nyu.edu.
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Tags: Academic freedom, American Association of University Professors, Colleges and Universities, Education, electronic bulletin, Higher education, opinion pieces, politics, research, Scholars at Risk, science, Social Sciences, submission requirements, University Values