STATEMENT
OF ACADEMIC FREEDOM, UWO
1. The essential functions
of a university are the pursuit, creation and dissemination of
knowledge through Research and other scholarly and creative activities,
and by Teaching. Academic Freedom is
essential to these functions and ensures the right of Members to teach,
investigate and speculate, and/or to create or perform works of art,
without deference to prescribed doctrine. Furthermore,
universities are communities in which the right to criticize all
aspects of society is valued and respected. These
rights are to be understood as central to the protection of the public
interest and the pursuit of truth.
2. Academic Freedom
specifically entails, but is not necessarily limited to, the right to:
1)
conduct Research and to publish the results thereof in media,
and according to a schedule, deemed appropriate by the Member(s)
concerned, subject to the provisions of any contract with a third party
that imposes a delay on the publication of the Member's Research. Any contractual arrangement concerning
Research shall comply with standards of research conduct that
membership in a professional body may impose on that Member, with the
Articles Intellectual Property and Academic Responsibilities, with
relevant federal and provincial statutes, and with regulations and
policies promulgated by Senate or the Board of Governors which are not
in conflict with this Collective Agreement, for the protection of
researchers, human subjects, the health and safety of the public, and
the welfare of laboratory animals;
2)
teach and discuss;
3)
select, acquire, disseminate or use documents in the exercise of
the Member's professional responsibilities;
4) criticize the
Employer, the Association or any corporate, political, public or private institution; and
5) create or perform
works of art;
all without
deference to prescribed doctrine.
3. The Employer and the
Association agree to uphold and protect the principles of Academic
Freedom as specified herein and not to infringe upon or abridge them.
4. The exercise of
Academic Freedom, as described in this Article, shall not cause the
imposition of any penalty or reprisal on a Member by the Employer or
the Association. Neither shall the
Employer or the Association countenance the restraint of Academic
Freedom or the imposition, arising from its exercise, of any penalties or
reprisals upon Members by any person, institution, agency or
corporation with whom the Employer or the Association does business, or
by any donor to the University or the Association, or from any source
within the University.
5. The credibility of the
principles of Academic Freedom depends upon a collective commitment to
exercise these principles in a manner consistent with the scholarly
obligation to base research and teaching on an honest and ethical
search for knowledge.
6. Academic Freedom does
not require neutrality on the part of a Member nor does it preclude
commitment on the part of a Member. Rather,
Academic Freedom makes such commitment possible. Academic
Freedom also carries the responsibility to respect the rights and
freedoms of others. In particular, Members
are expected to recognize the right of other members of the academic
community - faculty, staff and students - to express their opinions.
Academic Freedom does not confer legal immunity or legal defence
by the Employer in respect of positions that may be taken but which are
not specifically sanctioned by the Employer, nor does it diminish the
obligation of Members to meet their responsibilities to the Employer.
7. Members shall not
purport to speak on behalf of the Employer or the Association unless
specifically authorized to do so. A
statement of affiliation with, or position in the University, or of
qualifications relevant thereto, shall not be construed as an attempt
to speak on behalf of the Employer. A statement of Membership or
position in the Association shall not be construed as an attempt to
speak on behalf of the Association.
8. The Parties endorse and
subscribe to the statement defining Academic Freedom in the context of
libraries and expressing the responsibility of libraries to uphold
Academic Freedom, given originally as the Canadian Library
Association's Statement on Intellectual Freedom.
From the
Collective Agreement between University Administration and University of Western Ontario Faculty
Association.
We
ask SAFS members to send us copies of the statements of Academic
Freedom
prepared by their University and/or Faculty Association.
We would like to post these on our web site
and publish them in subsequent issues of the
Newsletter.
Newsletter, January 2004 -Text