Why colleges are turning to institutional neutrality

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 In October, the University of Michigan became one of the latest colleges to adopt institutional neutrality. Moving forward, the state flagship’s official statements won’t comment on current affairs that don’t affect its direct interests. 

“Institutional statements disserve the university’s mission,” Regent Sarah Hubbard, who supported the effort, said at the meeting approving the policy. “They undermine our commitment to open inquiry by suggesting that those who disagree are unwelcome. They cause would-be dissenters to worry that voicing disagreement may jeopardize admission, grades or advancement.”

At least two dozen institutions have adopted some type of institutional neutrality policy in recent years, although they differ on specifics. Louisiana State, Northwestern, Harvard, Stanford and Johns Hopkins universities have all adopted these policies. 

These moves can help stave off political controversy for institutions, experts say. But they may require careful conversations about a college’s mission and goals, as well as what exactly the policy will look like. 

Adoption of these policies has surged after last spring’s student protests over the Israel-Hamas war. 

“Some universities — in particular private universities — are adopting neutrality policies because they didn’t like the position they were put in,” said Jeremy Young, who leads Pen America’s program against educational censorship. “Adopting a neutrality policy allows them to reset.”

What’s the history of institutional neutrality?

Although the concept has gained popularity recently, neutrality is not new for universities. The genesis of the idea is most often traced back to a 1967 University of Chicago report, which argued that the institution must remain neutral in order to be a home to a wide diversity of views. 

The report came a year after student activists held a three-day sit-in, calling on the University of Chicago administration to not send class ranks to the Selective Service.

At the time, U.S. policy made college men in the bottom half of the first-year class immediately eligible for the Vietnam War draft.

Amid this climate, university officials declared the institution would remain neutral. “The university is the home and sponsor of critics; it is not itself the critic,” the 1967 report asserted.

However, the university also decided that year that it wouldn’t send grades or class ranks to the Selective Service. 

Despite the University of Chicago’s high-profile report, the concept of institutional neutrality predates the 1960s, said Joan Scott, former chair and current member of the academic freedom and tenure committee at the American Association of University Professors. 

At the turn of the 20th century, the University of Chicago was facing scrutiny from politicians who viewed it as too progressive, according to Scott, who is a historian. The university declared that it wouldn’t take a position on public questions, though faculty members could voice their own individual perspectives. 

Institutional neutrality is often discussed as a free speech principle, she said. But it is also a tactic developed to distance colleges from the political fracas. 

“If you look at the history of institutional neutrality, it always comes in the face of some kind of attack or perceived attack on higher education,” Scott said. 

Today, that pressure is twofold. When universities released statements about the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israel, they often faced backlash from both pro-Palestinian students and pro-Israel donors and politicians. 

For example, at the University of Pennsylvania, then-President Liz Magill sent out eight emails to the student body about antisemitism and the Israel-Hamas war between September 2023 and December 2023. Some students condemned her response for not addressing Palestinian suffering. But at the same time, other students, as well as donors and politicians, said the university failed to handle antisemitism on campus. 

She testified before the House’s education committee about the university’s response to the campus unrest in December last year, drawing further backlash and accusations that the institution failed to protect Jewish students. Days later, Magill resigned. 

 

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