พรพรสำฦต

President Herbst addresses academic freedom and China

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Editors at the New York Times invited พรพรสำฦต to weigh in on an important issue regarding the internationalization of higher education: How can American scholars and universities maintain their academic freedom when interacting with China?

 The storyโ€™s timing was apropos, as 18 Chinese students arrived last week as members of the Class of 2015, the largest contingent in พรพรสำฦตโ€™s history. According to the Times, there are more undergraduates studying in the U.S. from China than from any other country in the world.

โ€œAmerican universities should aggressively defend academic freedom while actively engaging with China,โ€ Herbst began.

He called on American diplomats and elected officials to protest restrictions on academics that have been stymied by the Chinese, and to highlight โ€œthe negative effects on China in setting up barriers for academic research and exchange.โ€

On balance, he added: โ€œWe should also seek to improve Americaโ€™s own good but not perfect record in allowing critics to visit our country.โ€

Herbst was one of seven featured debaters on the subject, each of whom offered a different point of view. For example, Forbes columnist Gordon G. Chang said that American universities are โ€œno matchโ€ for Chinaโ€™s Communist Party, while James Millward, a Georgetown University historian who was denied a visa to study in Tibet, suggested that U.S. institutions have been โ€œfar too timid, limited, and uncreative in their response.โ€

Read about and comment on the debate at