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Academic freedom entails free speech

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M&G 13 March 2026

The Srila Roy controversy exposes the fragile balance between free inquiry, public accountability and institutional power in South African universities

- Edwin Naidu

Academic freedom entails free speech

Reckless: After Professor Srila Roy made a controversial remark on X in February, she resigned from the post of head of the sociology department at the department's request. Wits placed her on precautionary suspension pending an internal investigation. Photo: File

The controversy surrounding Professor Srila Roy's remarks and her subsequent resignation at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) raises difficult questions about the boundaries, responsibilities and lived realities of academic freedom in South Africa's charged sociopolitical environment.

At the centre of the debate is whether universities are now compelled to tighten policies governing social media use, ethical obligations and public commentary by academic staff - and what this would mean for free inquiry and public debate.

The Roy saga is not merely about what could be perceived as one academic's ill-judged tweet. It is about how universities respond to controversial speech, who is sanctioned and why and whether institutional values are increasingly supplanting academic freedom as the final arbiter of acceptable expression.

What is academic freedom?

Academic freedom is a foundational principle of higher education.

It safeguards scholars' and students' ability to teach, learn, debate, research and engage in public discourse without fear of censorship, punishment or political interference.

It underpins critical thinking, innovation and democratic engagement.

However, academic freedom is not absolute.

It does not shield hate speech, racism, discrimination, harassment or unethical professional conduct. Nor does it protect speech that breaches the law or undermines the dignity of individuals or groups. In short, academic freedom protects scholarly expression-not harmful conduct.

The difficulty lies in determining where that line is drawn, who draws it and whether the consequences are proportionate.

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