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Bridgstock, Martin – Industry and Higher Education, 1996
Interviews with 28 academic scientists involved with industrial organizations found strong concern for public safety and condemnation of concealed conflicts of interest. They showed much less concern about restriction of information flow and regarded commercial exploitation of research to be legitimate. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Ethics, Higher Education, Industry
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Stichler, Richard N. – Academe, 1997
Discusses the role of college faculty in disciplinary procedures against faculty accused of violating professional or personal ethical standards. Notes cases that illustrate the reasons for the public perception that college faculty lack the will to govern and discipline themselves. (MDM)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Competence, Discipline
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Fitchue, M. Anthony – Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, 1997
In 1935, the Howard University philosopher Alain Locke asked W. E. B. Du Bois to contribute to an adult education project for African Americans. Censorship by white-controlled foundations forced Locke to reject the Du Bois essay to protect contributions for causes of great importance to blacks. (Author/SLD)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Blacks, Censorship, Civil Rights
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Larson, Elaine – Journal of Professional Nursing, 1997
Potential conflicts over academic freedom may arise between college faculty and administrators. There is a need to balance freedom/independence and collaboration/interdependence as well as service and scholarship roles. The support role that makes this work does not receive adequate attention. (SK)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrator Role, College Administration, College Faculty
Bartlett, Thomas – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2002
Discusses how guidelines for classroom discussion, popular in women's studies and sociology, have set off campus controversies over freedom of speech. (EV)
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Freedom of Speech, Guidelines
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Buck, Jane – Higher Education in Europe, 2001
Asserts that it behooves an organization like the American Association of University Professors, a major role of which is to protect academic freedom, to make sure that the integration of online instruction into the activities of traditional higher education will give rise to the same guarantees as to academic freedom and quality as in traditional…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Distance Education, Educational Quality, Higher Education
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Mash, S. David – Academe, 2003
Asserts that the systematic de-emphasis of print (as opposed to electronic) media and the unique habits of mind they alone inculcate suppresses the spirit of inquiry because it foreshortens the horizon of ideas to which a student may be exposed and narrows the cognitive options for developing and exploring alternative ways of thinking. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Electronic Publishing, Electronic Text, Higher Education
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English, Fenwick W. – Leadership and Policy in Schools, 2003
Argues that recent efforts by national accrediting agencies, especially the Educational Leadership Constituent Council, to upgrade preparation standards for administrators embodies the teleology of standardization whose principal objective is to remove the university and college as the primary site for the preparation of educational leaders--an…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrator Education, Certification, College Curriculum
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Herriman, Naomi – English Quarterly, 2001
Proposes that the freedom of experiencing many works from various art arenas allows students to become strong, independent, educated individuals. Discusses censorship in the classroom, the purpose of literature, censorship prevention, and procedures for challenging decisions to censor works of literature. Appends a form to request a…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, Educational Environment, Elementary Secondary Education
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Scott, Joan Wallach – Academe, 2002
Explores negative effects on academic expertise and the academic freedom of faculty when governing boards and administrators look to the corporate world for organizational models. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, College Governing Councils, Faculty College Relationship
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Stader, David L.; Francis, Dannie B. – Clearing House, 2003
Examines litigation involving academic freedom, expressive freedom, and drug testing as examples of the shifting balance between teacher rights and school board authority. Concludes that balancing teacher rights with community expectations is difficult, and the scales of justice may not always tip in favor of a teacher's rights. (SG)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Court Litigation, Drug Use Testing, Elementary Secondary Education
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Weeks, Kent; Haglund, Rich – Journal of College and University Law, 2002
Proposes that faculty and administrators should be viewed as fiduciaries charged with acting in the best interests of their students. Reviews recent cases involving breach of fiduciary duty against schools and discusses whether imposing fiduciary duties would hinder academic freedom. Suggests why the doctrine of good faith and fair dealing offers…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Administrator Responsibility, College Faculty, Higher Education
Gabrick, Andrea – Currents, 2002
Presents an interview on student newspapers with Bob Durkee, vice president for public affairs at Princeton University, about how his experience as a student reporter and editor has influenced his views as an administrator, what has changed over the years, and how he manages and interacts with a vigorous student press. (EV)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Freedom of Speech, Higher Education, Interviews
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Lawrence, Charles R. III – Academe, 1990
Whenever we decide that racist speech must be tolerated because of the importance of maintaining societal tolerance for all unpopular speech, we are asking socially subordinated groups to bear the burden of racism for the good of all. Those who pay the price must be fairly represented. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Constitutional Law, Democratic Values, Freedom of Speech
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Streeter, Thomas – Journal of Communication, 1990
Explores the implications of critical legal studies (CLS)--a new current in contemporary legal theory--for general discussions of freedom of speech and public interest. Applies CLS concepts to the conflict between broadcasters' and citizens' free speech rights as expressed in the contemporary Fairness Doctrine. Explores CLS's relevance to several…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Civil Law, Communication Research, Federal Regulation
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