AAUP Updates

The news that Penn State President Neeli Bendapudi has asked university trustees to approve closing seven of its campuses despite the fact that university finances are strong is dismaying. So is the fact that administrators arrived at this proposal without faculty involvement in decision making. The threatened campuses serve thousands of students and employ hundreds of faculty and staff across Pennsylvania. The proposal to substitute online classes for the in-person instruction, mentoring, research, and service conducted at these campuses does a disservice to students and their communities and threatens the academic integrity of existing programs as well as quality, equity, and access.

Last week Johns Hopkins University Press published the twelfth edition of the AAUP's Policy Documents and Reports, informally known as the Redbook. The Redbook brings together in one convenient place AAUP policy documents and reports developed collaboratively over more than a century, providing an authoritative source for sound academic practice and for defending and strengthening today's academic communities.

A new AAUP report, Academic Freedom and Tenure Muhlenberg College, concludes that the administration, in initially dismissing Dr. Maura Finkelstein, acted in violation of AAUP-supported principles and standards of academic freedom and due process. The report also found that the college’s equal opportunity and nondiscrimination policies, developed by outside consultants, do not sufficiently protect academic freedom and due process, nor do they comport with widely accepted standards of academic governance.

President Donald Trump’s executive order on accreditation is yet another attempt to dictate what is taught, learned, said and done by college students and instructors. Threats to remove accreditors from their roles are transparent attempts to consolidate more power in the hands of the Trump administration in order to stifle teaching and research. These attacks are aimed at removing educational decision-making from educators and reshaping higher education to fit an authoritarian political agenda.

The national AAUP and our Harvard chapter filed a lawsuit on Friday seeking to block the Trump administration from demanding that Harvard University restrict speech and restructure its core operations or else face the cancellation of $8.7 billion in federal funding for the university and its affiliated hospitals.

AAUP in the News

Sun, 04/27/2025  |  The Guardian

“The workers and the unions, faculty, students, staff are leading and developing the fight in how to respond to the Trump administration, and we’re sort of dragging the universities along with us, slowly,” said Todd Wolfson, the president of the AAUP, which has led faculty organising efforts on many campuses and filed four separate lawsuits against the administration over its attacks on universities.

Tue, 04/22/2025  |  Washington Post

Harvard’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors, which filed a lawsuit earlier this month to block the Trump administration’s cuts, praised the university for taking legal action.

“It is high time for leading civil society institutions like Harvard to refuse and resist this federal government overreach and abuse,” said Kirsten Weld, a history professor at Harvard and president of the AAUP Harvard faculty chapter.

Thu, 04/17/2025  |  Associated Press

“College campuses have historically been the places where these kind of conversations, these kind of robust debates and dissent take place in the United States. It’s healthy for democracy. And they’re trying to destroy all of that in order to enact their vision and depraved agenda.”

Mon, 04/14/2025  |  WSKG

“Institutions that stood up are remembered for standing up to that power & that coercion, they're remembered for their acts of bravery. Institutions that capitulated are remembered for their willingness to cave to autocratic demands.”

— Risa Lieberwitz, president of the Cornell chapter of the AAUP

Mon, 04/07/2025  |  CBS News

"Researchers are receiving a stop work order for wanting to understand things like differences in infant mortality in ubran and rural communities. That's being labeled as DEI. The slash and burn approach to our research is unfair, unlawful, and fundamentally wrong." — AAUP president Todd Wolfson

 

Fri, 03/14/2025  |  Ms. Magazine

"Look, this is going to be a long fight. We need everyone on board. This is why we’re developing a multi-pronged approach and building alliances with students, other unions and the public. This is the only way to stop the anti-worker and anti-union policies that are being promoted by Trump and his administration." - AAUP Vice-President Rotua Lumbantobing.

Sat, 03/08/2025  |  The Guardian

“Billions of dollars in research has been frozen, and that’s research on things that every American depends on,” AAUP President Todd Wolfson said. “Our members  having to lay people off, having to close their labs, having to ask for special circumstances to be able to keep rare supplies, like animals, alive. It’s been a complete, utter, destruction of the United States research infrastructure.”

Upcoming Events

May 19, 2025

Join us for a critical town hall with Puya Gerami, a labor educator with extensive organizing experience at SEIU 1999 New England, and KB Brower, organizing director for Bargaining for the Common Good at the Action Center on Race and the Economy.

We’ll dig into how we build real power in this moment—organizing in the streets, developing political leadership, and winning legislative and electoral fights.

 

May 20, 2025

Join this timely webinar to explore the whatwhy, and how of mutual defense pacts—how they’re formed, what they accomplish, and how they are reshaping the landscape of higher education organizing. Speakers will share lessons from campuses already engaged in this movement, offer concrete strategies for building cross-campus solidarity, and provide tools and inspiration for collective action that can’t be ignored.

May 30, 2025 to May 31, 2025

A meeting of the AAUP's Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure. 

E-mail Updates

 

Announcements

The AAUP invites applications for a faculty editor or faculty coeditors for the next two volumes of the Journal of Academic Freedom, an online journal that seeks to develop international discussion of academic freedom and related issues. Applications are due by June 1, 2025.

The AAUP seeks a book review editor for Academe, its quarterly magazine. The application deadline is June 1, 2025.

The AAUP is excited to announce the publication of the twelfth edition of its Policy Documents and Reports. Known as the Redbook, it contains the Association's major policy statements and is widely regarded as an authoritative source on sound academic practice.

See open positions and learn how to apply.