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Pittâs punishment of professor over âdeep disagreementâ with academic paper merits judicial intervention
Itâs not too often that FIREcomes across a public university â bound by the First Amendment â that puts in writing that it is motivated to discipline a faculty member merely because it disagrees with their opinions. But at the University of Pittsburgh, the administration made it crystal clear to a professor that his teaching privileges were revoked because of its âdeep disagreementâ with his viewpoints expressed in an academic paper. Now, Pitt faces a First Amendment lawsuit over its hamfisted attempt to silence academic discourse.
This legal brouhaha began on March 24, 2020, when associate professor of medicine Norman C. Wang an article discussing the demographics of the cardiology workforce. Wangâs arguments supporting the âacademic mismatchâ criticism of student diversity initiatives soon attracted sharp from medical practitioners. This prompted Pitt to inform Wang â in writing â that â[d]ue to your recent publications, expressed beliefs and your ongoing stance to defend them . . . we can no longer have you serve in any medical education role in the institution.â
Pittâs clumsy attempt to camouflage its censorship in baseless academic dishonesty accusations did not fool Wang or ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ.
The university administration also took the drastic step of calling on the journal to Wangâs paper, citing largely unspecified âmisconceptions,â âmisquotes,â âinaccuracies,â and âmisstatementsâ that purportedly âvoid the paper of its scientific validity.â Despite not providing a full account of these alleged inaccuracies, the journal acquiesced.
Pittâs clumsy attempt to camouflage its censorship in baseless academic dishonesty accusations did not fool Wang or ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ. Even today, almost half a year after punishing Wang, Pitt has not substantiated its academic dishonesty allegations or brought academic misconduct charges against him. Pittâs actions appear wholly divorced from its for resolving such disputes, which require â at the very least â affording Wang an opportunity to be heard prior to punishment. The universityâs actions apparently rest entirely on its âdeep disagreementâ with Wangâs âexpressed beliefsâ rather than any good faith objection to his academic integrity.
Pittâs futile efforts to justify punishing Wang in violation of his First Amendment and academic freedom rights earned the university an by the United States Department of Education in October, followed by a lawsuit seeking Wangâs reinstatement filed by the in December. It also earned the university a FIRE letter today calling for the university to rescind its punishment of Wang over his academic writing.
FIRE is glad to see Wang fighting Pittâs egregious abdication of professorsâ rights to pursue academic discourse. Faculty members are free to vehemently criticize each otherâs work â such disagreement represents the back-and-forth of academic discourse, and the expected result of publishing controversial literature. The universityâs administration, however, as the guarantor of academic freedom, must defend its professorsâ expressive rights against calls to punish them for their academic writings. Instead, Pitt cited unfounded academic misconduct claims to cover up how it stripped Wang of his teaching role solely because it disagreed with his opinions.
Pitt faculty deserve better than being thrown under the bus for expressing controversial viewpoints. FIREurges Pitt to recognize its professorsâ First Amendment freedoms, and commit to upholding these rights when challenged.
You can read the Wang's full lawsuit here:
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