
Reviews
As universities globalize, authoritarian regimes export censorship to American campuses. In Authoritarians in the Academy, Sarah McLaughlin unsparingly exposes how foreign pressure, self-censorship, and administrative complicity threaten academic freedom—challenging the notion that universities remain safe havens for open debate. A timely warning from the front lines of global free expression.
Essential reading for understanding how authoritarians abroad are limiting the freedom to think, teach, and learn at US universities. McLaughlin expertly shows how the sensitivity discourse prevalent on campuses is invoked to serve the censorious impulses of foreign regimes. With authoritarianism ascendant at home, this book is even more relevant.
Authoritarians in the Academy uncovers an alarming truth: oppressive governments are silencing their critics on campus, even those half a world away and in countries that protect campus free speech, including the United States. Beyond the students and faculty members who are directly targeted, the resulting chill stifles others and deprives all campus community members of the opportunity to hear suppressed information and ideas. This book is an urgent call to protect dissidents and dissent in higher education.
Book Details
Introduction
1. American Campuses, Red Lines
2. The Censorship Bureaucracy and Its Victims
3. How Did We Get Here?
4. The Global Threat of Authoritarian Censorship in Academia
5. Compromised Campuses
6. The
Introduction
1. American Campuses, Red Lines
2. The Censorship Bureaucracy and Its Victims
3. How Did We Get Here?
4. The Global Threat of Authoritarian Censorship in Academia
5. Compromised Campuses
6. The Surveilled Classroom
7. A Free World Needs Free Campuses