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McCarthyism alive and well in academia in the USA

It's most troubling! Despite the First Amendment guaranteeing freedom of speech - frequently upheld by the US Supreme Court, sometimes even in bizarre circumstances - academic freedom on campus is seemingly an entirely different matter. A few weeks ago it was historian Norman Finkelstein who was under attack at De Paul University.

Now, as reported on CounterPunch, a well-known legal scholar has been denied appointment as Dean of the Law School at the University of California at Irvine:

"One week after the renowned legal scholar Erwin Chemerinsky was offered the position of dean of the new law school at the University of California at Irvine, Chancellor Michael Drake withdrew the offer, informing Duke Law Professor Chemerinsky he had proved to be "too politically controversial." Chemerinsky is one of the most eminent law teachers and constitutional law scholars in the country. Author of a leading treatise on constitutional law, he has written four books and more than 100 law review articles. In 2005, he was named by Legal Affairs as one of "the top 20 legal thinkers in America."

This is the latest chapter in the post September 11 attack on academic freedom under the guise of protecting security. Two weeks after 9/11, former White House spokeman Ari Fleischer cautioned Americans "they need to watch what they say, watch what they do." The American Council of Trustees and Alumni, a group founded by Lynne Cheney and Senator Joe Lieberman, accused universities of being the weak link in the war on terror; it included the names of 117 "un-American" professors, students and staff members. A few months later, a blacklisting Internet cite called Campus Watch was launched. It publishes dossiers on scholars who criticize U.S. Middle East policy and Israel's treatment of the Palestinians. Earlier this year, the Bruin Alumni Association at UCLA offered students $100 to tape left-wing professors."

UPDATE: It looks like some sort of common sense has prevailed. The appointment has been re-instated - as the LA Times reports late today.

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