Mizzou journalism faculty criticize MU chancellor for discouraging dissent
The following is a letter signed by 15 University of Missouri journalism faculty and sent to University of Missouri System president and chancellor Mun Choi. The letter came after Choi blocked students from his Twitter account.
Freedom of expression, scrutiny of public
officials and open government are bedrock principles of a democracy and of
institutions of higher learning. These values are central to our mission at the
Missouri School of Journalism.
So, we, the undersigned faculty members, want
to express our disappointment in a series of actions by University of Missouri
System President and MU Chancellor Mun Choi that — intentionally or not —
contradict the “Missouri Method” for which our school is justifiably
famous. His move to block students and others from his Twitter account is the
latest of these.
These actions include discouraging dissent —
publicly and in direct private communications from the chancellor to faculty
members — and singling out two of our colleagues in an interview with local
media.
As the university confronts unprecedented
financial challenges, and the likelihood of further layoffs and
belt-tightening, an implied intolerance of dissent looms as a very real threat.
Already, a few colleagues and students have confided that they fear that speaking
out will put their jobs or scholarships at risk. A number of our colleagues
work in our community newsrooms, which cover the university. Some may have
withheld signatures to avoid the perception of a conflict of interest.
That is why we feel it is important for us to
speak out about the potential for a chilling effect on the campus and on the
professional community news outlets staffed by MU faculty and students. If
President Choi’s actions have not had that effect so far, it’s only due to the
professional standards of the largely untenured School of Journalism faculty
and the courage of their students in upholding those standards — and the First
Amendment.
President Choi reversed his decision to block
students from his Twitter account under threat of a lawsuit. Yet it should not
take eruptions of public outrage to force his compliance with the values of
free speech and public openness that are at the heart of what we stand for — as
a School of Journalism, as a public institution of higher learning and as
inheritors of a great democratic tradition.
Amidst the global crisis of the pandemic,
leadership of the campus that is home to the world’s first school of journalism
should be modelling transparency.
Twitter is not known as a forum for reasoned
and temperate discussion but leaders who choose to use it as a means of
communication should not curb debate. Rather, they should seize the opportunity
to create a teaching moment by modeling responsive governance, open
communication and empathy with students whose lives and routines have been
profoundly disrupted.
More than 100 years ago, Walter Williams, the
founding dean of the Missouri School of Journalism — and future president of
this university — urged members of our profession to be “stoutly independent,
unmoved by pride of opinion or greed of power, constructive, tolerant but never
careless, self-controlled, patient, always respectful…” These words should be
reflected in action, and we urge the administration to be more transparent and
open in the information it shares with the campus and wider community during
the coronavirus crisis. If we are all in this together — and we are — we all
must have a voice in the process. And we all must listen to one another.
Kathy Kiely
Lee Hills Chair in Free Press Studies
Damon Kiesow
Knight Chair in Digital Editing and Producing
Ryan J. Thomas
Associate Professor
Ryan Famuliner
Assistant Professor
Robert Greene
Associate Professor, the Murray Center for Documentary Journalism
Keith Greenwood
Associate Professor
Amanda Hinnant
Associate Professor
Michael W. Kearney
Assistant Professor
Major King
Assistant Professor
Cristina Mislán
Associate Professor
Marty Steffens
SABEW Chair in Business and Financial Journalism
Ron Stodghill
Associate Professor
Tom Warhover
Associate Professor
Alison Young
Curtis B. Hurley Chair in Public Affairs Journalism
Shuhua Zhou
Leonard H. Goldenson Endowed Chair in Radio and Television