In the 9/15/97 Denver Post:
PROFS SAY BYU SHORT ON ACADEMIC FREEDOM By Kristen Moulton
(AP writer)
The climate for academic freedom at Brigham Young University is "distressingly poor" and infringements widespread, the American Association of University Professors said in a report issued today.
A 19-page report by an AAUP committee that probed the firing of a
professor and academic freedom issues at the Mormon Church owned university was published in the September-October issue of the AAUP journal Academe.
The 45,000 members of AAUP, national faculty group committed to academic
freedom on campuses, are to vote next June on whether to censure BYU's administration.
Such a censure would not threaten BYU's accreditation but would be a
blow to its prestige in the academic community.
The report concluded that the large number of cases charging violations
of academic freedom suggest "a widespread pattern of infringements on
academic freedom in a climate of oppression and fear of reprisals."
Administration efforts to protect orthodoxy at BYU-particularly when it
comes to feminist and Mormon studies-hinder professors from staying
current in their disciplines, the report said.
The university violated former English Professor Gail Turley Houston's
academic freedom when it refused to give her continuing status, BYU's
version of tenure, the AAUP said. The administration had accused Houston
of attacking BYU in speeches at a nonchurch sponsered forum on Mormon
studies, and in Student Review, a non-campus newspaper.
Alan Wilkins, academic vice president, wrote in a letter to faculty and
staff Friday that the university did not violate Houston's academic
freedom but that she had violated the university's policy by "publicly
contradicting...church doctrine and deliberately attacking the church."
In BYU's response to the AAUP report, also published in Academe, the
university said AAUP is not living up to its own statement that
religious universities can place limitations on academic freedom to
preserve their religious missions.
Wilkins said BYU rejects "AAUP's goal to impose a secular model on
religious universities."
In their rebuttal to the 17-page AAUP report, school officials
cited the following
excerpt from a 1994 speech Houston made at the Sunstone Symposium, an
independent annual gathering in Salt Lake City that invites analysis
of the Mormon
Church.
"The LDS Church seeks to silence its members who are having
visions of Mother in
Heaven. In effect, women are being told by their Mormon pastors to
deny their own
visions of God. . . . I did not know my Mother-in-Heaven until a just
a few years ago --
and I ask why would my church want me to forget her or deny her -- I
cannot and will not
do that."
BYU officials said those words leave little question Houston
violated school policy.
"Professor Houston was saying that the church is wrong on the
issue of praying to
Heavenly Mother," BYU officials state in their rebuttal. "To assert
that this was not
advocacy is simply implausible."
The AAUP report also castigates BYU for several other cases in
recent years,
including the firing of Professor Steven Epperson, who fell out of
favor with his bishop
for failing to attend church on Sundays. Epperson said he spent that
time with his family
feeding homeless people in Salt Lake City.
Several other cases of academic freedom violations are mentioned
in the AAUP
report, though investigators said they heard so many complaints during
their interviews
with more than 100 individuals that not every one was outlined.
"I was surprised by the number of cases that came to our
attention," said AAUP
investigator Linda Pratt, a professor at the University of Nebraska.
"Usually, when AAUP
comes to a campus, we know about one or possibly two very troubling
cases, but with
BYU, there was just a flood of them."
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