Entwicklung und
Zusammenarbeit

Cambridge Stands Firm on Academic Freedom

CUP changes stance and stands by China Quarterly

In a U-turn, Cambridge University Press (CUP) yesterday stated that it would make all the essays of its China Quarterly accessible again. This is a good development.

CUP had earlier decided to block access to 300 contributions in the academic journal, which has a strong reputation. The reason was that the Chinese government does not want certain topics to be discussed. These topics include human rights and Tibet, for example. We posted a blog entry on the matter yesterday morning, arguing that the stance taken by CUP was a neglect of duty. A university press must stand by what it publishes and ensure that such content is available to scholars interested in the respective topic.

CUP’s caving in to Chinese censorship caused an uproar internationally. As a response, the leaders of Cambridge University embraced academic freedom and told their publishing branch to reverse the decision. That this has happened is good news. The full story is here. It is deeply worrisome, however, that a publisher with an old and strong reputation such as CUP would not only consider doing an authoritarian government the favour of voluntary censorship, but even start to implement such censorship.

 

 

Relevante Artikel

Neueste Artikel

Gas- und Ölfirmen haben in der Corona-Krise in Afrika besonders gelitten: Arbeiter der Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation im Dezember 2020.

Afrikanische Volkswirtschaften

Corona-Krise abfedern

Kinder im Flüchtlingslager Kakuma in Kenia.

Die Flucht vor Krieg

Verlorene Jungen und Mädchen

Ein unbegleitetes Kind hofft in Tijuana, Mexiko, über die Grenze in die USA zu gelangen.

Kinder auf der Flucht

Ein einsamer Kampf

Kinderehen sind ein verbreitetes Phänomen in armen Ländern: 13-jähriges Mädchen aus Mali mit ihrer Tochter.

Körperliche Autonomie

Frauenrechte sind Menschenrechte

Beliebte Artikel