Abstract

In this article, I examine the difficulty of using student codes of conduct and civility policies as a way to restrict harmful speech. I argue that policies used to monitor students’ non-academic behaviour provide administrators with a means to restrict and surveil students’ political advocacy work, especially marginalized students’ advocacy. Rather than providing a ‘safe’ learning environment, codes of conduct curtail students’ opportunities for freedom of expression and limits their ability for critical pedagogical engagement with controversial ideas. Drawing on case studies at Canadian universities, I illustrate the contradictory challenges that student activists encounter when attempting to balance principles of freedom of expression and principles of equity on university campuses. Rather than use codes of conduct, I argue that administrators should adopt criteria that help students identify and limit dignitary harms. In doing so, students will be better equipped to assess their expressive freedom and associational rights with the rights of others to an equitable learning environment. Moreover, such an approach represents a decolonial shift and promises to expand our narrow liberal conception of rights and ensure marginalized peoples’ voices and worldviews are heard.

Highlights

  • Upholding both liberal principles of freedom of expression and the principles of equity as pro­ tected respectively in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and Canadian Human Rights legisla­ tion presents real political challenges

  • Others argue that students’ rights to free speech and associa­ tional rights should have the same status on university campuses as they would off campus (Cameron 2014; CAUT 2018, 2019; Chemerinsky & Gillman 2017; Cloud 2015). ey contend that restrictions on aca­ demic freedom and freedom of expression through student codes of conduct and civility policies are prob­ lematic

  • I examine the current debate around the use of student codes of conduct and civility policies to restrict harmful speech and their effects on marginalized students’ political advocacy work on Ca­ nadian campuses

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Summary

Article abstract

I examine the difficulty of using student codes of conduct and civility policies as a way to restrict harmful speech. Students will be better equipped to assess their expressive freedom and associational rights with the rights of others to an equitable learning environment Such an approach represents a decolonial shift and promises to expand our narrow liberal conception of rights and ensure marginalized peoples’ voices and worldviews are heard. Elizabeth Brulé is an Assistant Professor in the De­ partment of Gender Studies, at Queen’s University, with a research focus in institutional ethnography, In­ digenous feminist, anti­racist and anti­colonialist the­ ory and activism. She is of Franco­Ontarian and Métis ancestry

Hate Speech in Ontario Universities
So What Is to be Done?
Atlantis Journal
Full Text
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