Abstract
We advance the understanding of so-called “cancel culture” at the university by presenting the results of three survey experiments among university students. Designed in an “adversarial collaboration” among researchers with competing perspectives, these experiments disentangle whether students’ preferences for curtailing academic freedom are based on viewpoint discrimination, professional academic standards, or prosocial concerns. Our findings show that a substantive share of university students support viewpoint-based restrictions on academic discourse. While they also apply academic and prosocial criteria, they apply them more strongly to conservative viewpoints. The results further show that conservative statements are perceived as causing more social harm. However, prosocial concerns do not fully explain the higher demand for ideological viewpoint discrimination. These results are important because they can inform the debate about universities as ideological spaces—a view often invoked in recent government-led attacks on academic freedom.
Cite
@article{
doi:10.1073/pnas.2503804122,
author = {Claudia Diehl and Matthias Revers and Richard Traunmüller and Nils B. Weidmann and Alexander Wuttke },
title = {Students’ motives for restricting academic freedom: Viewpoint discrimination and prosocial concerns},
journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences},
volume = {122},
number = {47},
pages = {e2503804122},
year = {2025},
doi = {10.1073/pnas.2503804122},
URL = {https://www.pnas.org/doi/abs/10.1073/pnas.2503804122},
eprint = {https://www.pnas.org/doi/pdf/10.1073/pnas.2503804122},
abstract = {Academic freedom is under threat across the globe and is of vital concern to both researchers and society. We show that while limits on academic freedom are partly motivated by prosocial concerns, political viewpoint discrimination is another important driver of restrictions placed on speakers, teachers, and books on university campus. These findings are of great significance because they inform the debate about universities as ideologically biased environments—a view often invoked in recent government-led attacks on academic institutions. We advance the understanding of so-called “cancel culture” at the university by presenting the results of three survey experiments among university students. Designed in an “adversarial collaboration” among researchers with competing perspectives, these experiments disentangle whether students’ preferences for curtailing academic freedom are based on viewpoint discrimination, professional academic standards, or prosocial concerns. Our findings show that a substantive share of university students support viewpoint-based restrictions on academic discourse. While they also apply academic and prosocial criteria, they apply them more strongly to conservative viewpoints. The results further show that conservative statements are perceived as causing more social harm. However, prosocial concerns do not fully explain the higher demand for ideological viewpoint discrimination. These results are important because they can inform the debate about universities as ideological spaces—a view often invoked in recent government-led attacks on academic freedom.}}