University Freedom Charters: How best to protect free speech on Australian campuses

Jeremy SammutOctober 7, 2018PP10

This POLICY Paper recommends how and why a ‘university freedom charters’ policy that is backed with financial penalties for non-compliance might operate to actively spur Australian universities to implement appropriate measures to address anti-free speech disruptive behaviour and properly protect freedom of thought and expression.

This proposal for a new regulatory and compliance framework featuring greater external accountability for universities as the best way to promote free speech, is heavily drawn from the similar policy introduced in 2018 in the Canadian province of Ontario.

The reasons an ‘Ontario-style’ policy is needed in Australia are explained in terms of overcoming an evident and interrelated lack of institutional will within universities, and lack of political will within governments, to take appropriate action regarding protections for free speech on campus.

This paper also explains why the recommended policy is superior to recent proposals for Australian universities to voluntarily adopt ‘Chicago-style’ charters.

The robust regulatory and compliance approach adopted by the Ontario Government is explored at length to outline how and why our federal government should emulate that approach and implement compulsory freedom charters to ensure Australian universities are properly accountable for encouraging and maintaining free speech on campus.

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