Prevent is stopping free speech on campus and demonising Muslims
Many staff and students at universities across
Britain will have welcomed Liberty’s condemnation of the chilling effect the
government’s counter-terrorism strategy is having on free speech on campuses.
Recently published figures from the Office for Students showed that more than
2,000 events across Britain’s 300 or so higher education institutions have been
affected by Prevent.
While some events were allowed to take place with
conditions attached, 53 events or speaker requests on campuses were rejected
altogether by university authorities. The demonisation of Muslims through the
Prevent strategy has led to progressive dissent more broadly being curtailed.
The Prevent duty, introduced by the
Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015 places a legal obligation on
universities and other public institutions to “have due regard for the need to
prevent people being drawn into terrorism”. It is a McCarthyistic system,
drawing university staff into the task of security surveillance. If discovered
to be uncooperative, universities can be subject to direction by the secretary
of state and, ultimately, face a mandatory court order backed by criminal
sanctions for contempt of court. Quite apart from the fact that as tutors our
role should be one of supporting rather than spying on students, the Prevent
duty has resulted in the victimisation of Muslim students and the
institutionalisation of anti-Muslim racism in British universities.
Since its inception, students and staff have warned
about the potential for Prevent to have an impact on free speech on campus, in
particular that of Muslim students and staff. The latest statistics regarding
university events and speakers affected by the Prevent duty not only
demonstrate that it must be scrapped, but that politicians and the media must
listen to and amplify the voices of students rather than dismiss them as
“snowflakes” when they speak.
There is no doubt that Prevent is primarily targeted
at monitoring the speech and activities of Muslim students on campus. The
explanatory notes to the 2015 act state that the principal terrorist threat is
“from Al Qa’ida-associated groups and from other terrorist organisations in
Syria and Iraq”. The strategy is based on the scientifically debunked and
racist assumption that any Muslim has the potential to become radicalised and
violent.
Research has shown that this strategy has resulted
in the disproportionate and discriminatory victimisation of Muslim students. In
a society in which anti-Muslim racism is pervasive and institutionalised, the
Prevent duty adds purchase to the idea that Muslims are a threat, and gives
power to those with authority over Muslim students to act on their prejudice.
Remember the Muslim student accused of being a terrorist for reading a book
about terrorism in Staffordshire University library? Or the Muslim schoolchild
questioned because he said “eco-terrorist” in class? Prevent has meant that
Muslims students have even been watched while they pray.
Prevent’s broader effect is to suppress a wide range
of forms of valid political resistance. Universities have clamped down on
campus activism. Events, ranging from a panel on Kurdish political struggles at
Cambridge University to pro-Palestine events at the University of Exeter,
University College London and the London School of Economics have been policed
or cancelled. Curricula have suffered censorship – both self- and
university-imposed as a culture of fear has taken hold.
Meanwhile, students working to ensure campuses are
inclusive spaces free from racism, homophobia and transphobia have found
themselves branded snowflakes, vocally attacked and threatened with the
introduction of legislative measures. Far from so-called snowflake students
being a threat to campus free speech, it is measures such as Prevent that are
shutting down free thinking in Britain’s universities.
The dismissal of progressive students as snowflakes
comes after the success of anti-racist and anti-colonial movements such as
Black Lives Matter, Rhodes Must Fall and Why is My Curriculum White? The
refusal of students to tolerate racism and the spread of far-right ideology on
campus and their resistance to the systemic exclusion of non-white writers from
their curricula has been met with a backlash from the right. Branding students
as snowflakes is part of an ideological attack on progress, symptomatic of
whiteness closing ranks, of a culture reluctant to cede ground to a more
inclusive and progressive politics.
In the face of censorship, surveillance, suppression
and a climate of fear backed by criminal sanction, it is more important than
ever to think carefully about whether and how Muslim students can express
themselves and develop modes of resistance. What is clear is that students are
wise to what the real risks to free speech on campus are and what to do about
them.