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āThe New York Timesā on Bias in Legal Academia
(registration required) by Adam Liptak discusses a new survey that reveals that law school faculties are dominated by those with liberal political beliefs:
The study, to be published this fall in The Georgetown Law Journal, analyzes 11 years of records reflecting federal campaign contributions by professors at the top 21 law schools as ranked by U.S. News & World Report. Almost a third of these law professors contribute to campaigns, but of them, the study finds, 81 percent who contributed $200 or more gave wholly or mostly to Democrats; 15 percent gave wholly or mostly to Republicans.
This is unfortunate for our nationās legal culture. As FIREhas often remarked, an institution of higher education that is ideologically or politically monolithic cannot hope to match the intellectual vibrancy of an institution that welcome ideas from every political perspective. And weāre not alone. Study co-author John McGinnis, a professor at Northwesternās law school, remarked in the article that his belief was that āliberal ideas might well be strengthened and made more effective if liberals had to run a more conservative gantlet among their own colleagues when developing them.ā This goes not just for āliberal ideasā but for ideas of every stripe.
Moreover, ideological uniformity also contributes greatly to censorship and repression. We frequently see various kinds of rather ordinary political and religious speech suppressed simply because those ideas are āoffensiveā or āextreme.ā Yet those ideas are not generally considered āoffensiveā or āextremeā outside of the academy (including, for example, patriotic displays). An ideologically monolithic culture is often unable to understand the existence of dissent, much less respond to that dissent with appropriate respect for freedom of expression.
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