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Haidt: US university campuses are ‘exploding’

Social psychologist says universities have failed to enforce boundaries for behaviour

The social psychologist Jonathan Haidt has told the ̳ that American university campuses ‘are exploding’ because administrations have ‘never made clear boundaries’ on what was acceptable student behaviour. Talking about student protests against the war in Gaza that have engulfed universities across the country, the New York University professor said while ‘protests and slogans’ are ‘normal political speech’, tented camps that ‘block students from going to class, well that’s wrong”.

‘It’s against university policy and it interferes with the basic functioning of the university”, Professor Haidt told HARDtalk. “Now of course if you want to do civil disobedience and do that, you can do that. And then you should pay the consequences. The whole point of civil disobedience is you're willing to go to jail for it.’ Haidt’s own office building at New York University was the site of a tented camp by protesters, dozens of whom were arrested.

Speaking to Stephen Sackur, the professor said that since around 2014, universities have tolerated students shutting down speakers they do not like. ‘What happened was nobody ever did anything about it, and that sent the message that if you are protesting for certain political causes, you can do and say whatever you want, you can intimidate people, you can threaten people, and nothing's going to happen to you.’ He said this was the ‘back story’ for explaining the behaviour of students in the current protests.

Asked if the protesters today were similar to the famous student protests across the United States in the 1960s, Professor Haidt said that although there is ‘continuity’ because such historic protests were often anti-war, ‘there was a very different spirit’ to today’s protests. He claimed that whereas the spirit in the 60s was ‘of joy’, today’s student activism, ‘is very, very different. There’s not the spirit of joy’.

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