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Marquette Continues to Earn âWorst Schoolâ for Free Speech Label With New Punishments for McAdams
A suspension through the fall 2016 semester and a compelled apology: that is the punishment on Marquette University Professor John McAdams yesterday. The punishment stems from his 2014 online criticism of a graduate student instructor who told a student not to oppose same-sex marriage in her class at the Catholic university.
This development comes as the result of recommendations made to Marquette President Michael Lovell by a faculty hearing committee in January. However, according to a report today from , a lawyer for McAdams claims that the faculty panel never recommended, in its confidential 123-page report, that McAdams apologize as a condition for his return to workâa condition that amounts to an age-old inquisitorial tactic used to violate freedom of conscience through compelled speech. That condition, it appears, was apparently imposed by the administration.
McAdamsâ lawyer told IHE that the apology and admission of guilt must come within two weeks or his client will lose his job. According to IHE, a spokesman for the university refused to answer questions about the university presidentâs role in demanding an apology.
The Wisconsin Institute for Law & Liberty, which has worked with McAdams on his case, about the details of the faculty committeeâs confidential recommendations and the subsequent punishment:
The Committee found that Marquette had improperly suspended Dr. McAdams in violation of his due process rights under the Faculty Statutes and disagreed with the Universityâs desire to terminate him. It did recommend that he be suspended for one to two semesters, with benefits, but without pay.
In its lengthy report, the Faculty Hearing Committee gave lip service to academic freedom but made it subject to a multi-factor after-the-fact balancing test that would leave members of the university with no real guidance or protection other than the sufferance of their colleagues. In other words, University faculty retain freedom of speech only so far as their colleagues are willing to tolerate it.
FIRE has harshly criticized Marquetteâs treatment of professor McAdams from the very beginning. FIREwrote to Marquette early last year after the university suspended McAdamsâwho is a long-time critic of the administrationâwithout due process, publicly insinuated that he could be a violent threat to the campus, and cancelled his classes. FIREasked the university to immediately reinstate McAdams, now in his third semester of being banned from campus, and to respect his free speech and due process rights.
As a result of Marquetteâs complete disregard for McAdamsâ right to free speech and academic freedom, FIREplaced the university on its list of the for in each of the last two years. With Marquetteâs latest unjust actions against McAdams, the university seems to be angling for permanent residence on our list.
The Backstory
On November 2014, McAdams, a tenured associate professor of political science, on his Marquette Warrior blog describing a recorded conversation between an undergraduate student and the instructor for his âTheory of Ethicsâ philosophy course. The instructor, Cheryl Abbate, was recorded telling the student that the expression of certain opinions in class was inappropriate because those opinions may be considered offensive to other listeners. Abbate specifically cited the studentâs stated opposition to same-sex marriage as a problem.
Abbateâs actions were criticized by readers of McAdamsâ blog entry, and her alleged actions from national media. In response, Richard C. Holz, dean of Marquetteâs Klingler College of Arts and Sciences, suspended McAdams.
The suspension letter stated that Marquette was âcontinuing to review [McAdamsâs] conductâ and ordered him not to enter the Marquette campus except with advance permission from the university. Holz did not inform McAdams of any alleged policy violations justifying the suspension, as require.
On December 18, Marquette cancelled McAdamsâs spring semester classes, and McAdams has not taught a class since. In January 2015, the university announced that it would seek his termination. His appeal was heard by Marquetteâs Faculty Hearing Committee in September.
While Marquette has not yet fired McAdams, the action announced yesterday punishes him for his expression and seeks to violate his conscience by demanding an apology for a wrong he does not believe he committed.
In ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs January 30, 2015, letter, FIREtold Marquette that unilaterally suspending McAdams for the opinions expressed on his blog violated his freedom of speech and academic freedom rights. FIREalso pointed out Marquetteâs multiple violations of faculty policies, that McAdams constituted a threat to campus safety, and highlighted the severe threat to free speech posed by Marquetteâs that McAdams was directly culpable for the actions of unknown individuals who allegedly harassed or threatened Abbate after reading his blog.
The American Association of University Professors also wrote a letter to the university, noting that the universityâs actions had the âcharacteristics of a summary dismissal.â The letter also urged the university âto reach an arrangement with Professor McAdams which will return him to his teaching responsibilities.â
The Way Forward
FIRE is deeply concerned by the number of faculty membersâmany of whom are or were tenuredâwho have been investigated, or even fired, for their protected speech in recent years.
Andrea Quenette at the University of Kansas was placed on leave last year after numerous students filed discrimination complaints against her following a candid in-class discussion about timely racial issues. She was only cleared of those baseless charges this past week.
Earlier this year, two faculty members at Mount St. Maryâs University were fired after criticizing their university administration.
Dave Hillman at Saint Maryâs University of Minnesota lost his job last year after allegedly helping a production of a school play keep true to its ancient origins.
Erika and Nicholas Christakis. Teresa Buchanan. Laura Kipnis. Alice Dreger. Chester Kulis. Patti Adler. The list goes on and on and on.
FIRE will continue to monitor McAdamsâ situation and lend support to all faculty members, like McAdams, who become subject to official university inquisitions into their protected speech.
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