MESA Committee on Academic Freedom
Committee Members
Interventions and Responses
Protocol
The Committee on Academic Freedom
(CAF) seeks
to foster the free exchange of knowledge as a human
right and to inhibit infringements on that right by
government restrictions on scholars. The United Nations’
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights and Covenant on Economic,
Social
and Cultural Rights provide the principal standards
by which human rights violations are identified today.
Those rights include the right to education and work,
freedom of movement and residence, and freedom of
association
and assembly.
Through the Committee on Academic
Freedom, MESA monitors
infringements on academic freedom on the Middle East
and North Africa world wide. Such infringements include
governmental refusal to allow scholars to conduct scholarly
research, publish their findings, deliver academic
lectures,
and travel to international scholarly meetings. The
Committee documents instances where professors and
academic
researchers in all disciplines are persecuted for their
peaceful professional or personal activities, particularly
when engaged in activities to ensure respect for human
rights. The Committee documents such violations as
government
revocation of academic degrees; demotion or dismissal;
denial of a petition to emigrate, travel abroad or
return
to one’s country of origin; and arrest, arbitrary
detention, disappearance, and extrajudicial killing.
The Committee obtains information
on human rights violations directly from the concerned
persons, from their professional associates, or from
reputable third parties. Evaluation of requests for
action may be coordinated with other professional organizations,
such as the Science and Human Rights Program of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Once case information is compiled, the Committee decides
on the action to be taken. The Committee may write a
letter of inquiry to the appropriate authorities and,
if necessary, follow up with additional letters. If
the Committee deems appropriate additional activities,
such as representations to embassies or visits to detainees,
authorization for incurring related expenses must be
obtained from the MESA Board of Directors. When possible,
such activities are undertaken in coordination with
other scholarly associations. Given the limited time
and resources of the Committee, only the most egregious
cases of human rights violations can be considered.
The members of the Committee are
appointed by the President of MESA upon the recommendation
of
the Board of Directors. The Committee consists of a
chair; two co-chairs (one for the MENA region, the
other for North America); ten members covering the
MENA region; five
focusing on AF issues in
North
America; and 3 ex-officio members
(MESA's President and Executive Director, and a member
of MESA's Committee on Public Affairs). CAF's previous
chair serves as a consultant to
the committee.
The Committee convenes in a formal
session once a year at the annual meeting of MESA. Members
maintain close contact between sessions and can take
up new cases at any time during the year. Correspondence
and administration for the Committee are handled by
the MESA Secretariat. Letters of inquiry and concern
may be signed by either the President or the Executive
Director of MESA, as deemed appropriate. |
In addition to the work of MESA's Committee on Academic Freedom, MESA is an affiliate of the Scholars at Risk Network, a network of universities and colleges devoted to responding to attacks on academic freedom. Among its many activities, the SAR network finds academic homes for scholars who must flee their countries for their own safety, allowing them to continue their important academic work elsewhere. |