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Profs Sue Emory Over Protest Arrests, Free Speech Debate

Profs Sue Emory Over Protest Arrests, Free Speech Debate

Published 1 week, 3 days ago
Description

Three tenured professors at Emory University in Atlanta have filed a lawsuit against the school following their arrests during a campus protest last year. The protest, held on April 25, 2024, was against the Israel-Hamas war and involved setting up tents on the quad. Despite the professors claiming they were merely observing, the university called in city cops and state troopers, resulting in 28 arrests. The professors allege that the university violated its own free speech rules by immediately resorting to heavy policing.

The professors, who are longtime faculty in fields such as English, indigenous studies, and economics, were charged but had the charges dropped. They are now suing for the legal fees they incurred and punitive damages in DeKalb County court. Emory University maintains that the lawsuit is without merit, asserting that they had to act to ensure everyones safety.

Interestingly, most of those arrested, 20 out of 28, were actually connected to the university, not outsiders as claimed. Following the arrests, the professors faced threats and harassment, contributing to larger debates on campuses about protecting Jewish students and handling protests. This case is part of a national trend where faculty and students sue schools over crackdowns on pro-Palestinian activism, with a reported threefold increase in legal help requests since 2023.

One professor, Noelle McAfee, even became president of the faculty senate post-arrest and advocated for the then-president to drop charges. Emory later amended its open expression policy, banning tents, overnight demonstrations, and building takeovers. However, legal battles like this continue to surface on elite campuses.

The professors aim to hold the university accountable and spark real change, but students at Emory now express fear of arrests over what was once considered good trouble. This development highlights the rapidly changing landscape of protest vibes on college campuses.

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