“Measuring” the Erosion of Academic Freedom as an International Human Right: A Report on the Legal Protection of Academic Freedom in Europe
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VANDERBILT JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW
Abstract
This Article reports and comments on the results of an
assessment of the legal protection of the right to academic
freedom (an examination of its factual protection to be
undertaken at a future point) in EU member states, having
examined these countries’ constitutions, laws on higher
education, and other relevant legislation. The assessment relied
on a standard scorecard, developed by utilizing indicators of
protection of academic freedom, notably as reflected in
UNESCO’s Recommendation concerning the Status of HigherEducation Teaching Personnel, a document of 1997 that is not
legally, but “politically” binding, and which concretizes
international human rights requirements in respect of academic
freedom—a right under international human rights law. The
results for the various countries have been quantified, and the
countries have been ranked in accordance with “their performance.” Overall, the state of the legal protection of the
right to academic freedom in Europe appears to be one of “illhealth.” Increasingly, European countries are merely paying lip
service to this important right. While the concept of institutional
autonomy is being misconstrued, self-governance in higher
education institutions and employment security are being
subjected to rigorous processes of erosion.