"The Universities Are the Enemy": Why Europe Must Act Now [View all]
The EU should welcome US scholars fleeing Trumps assault on academiaand lead in global innovation and freedom.
https://www.socialeurope.eu/the-universities-are-the-enemy-why-europe-must-act-now

This May, American universities hold graduation ceremonies, where thousands of students will receive their long-awaited and hard-earned degrees in the presence of their loved ones. However, this years commencements occur under the shadow of historically unprecedented assaults on the academic community by the new US administration. Among Donald Trumps initial actions were the freezing of federal research funding,
the dismantling of DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) programmes, the
enforcement of immigration laws on campusesparticularly targeting those involved in pro-Palestinian demonstrations
the removal of protections for LGBTQ+ students, and the unprecedented announcement of plans to
abolish the Department of Education. These actions reflect the ideological agenda of the new radical right-wing government, starkly symbolised by J.D. Vance, vice president and a prominent figure in the MAGA movement, who declared in a 2021 speech at the National Conservatism Conference that The Universities are the Enemy. This was not merely an intellectual pose but a harbinger of the governments shock doctrine in American science and higher education.
Within the democratic academic community, the decision of three prominent professorsJason Stanley, Timothy Snyder, and Marci Shore
to leave Yale University in protest against Trumps policies has sent shockwaves. They have chosen the University of Toronto as their new academic home, a symbolic gesture that raises a profound question: Should this moment not serve as a catalyst for the European Union to launch a dedicated initiative aimed at welcoming American researchers, academics, PhD candidates, and students into European universities? At a time when entire research programmes are being dismantled in the US and academic freedom is under siege, the EU has a unique opportunity to reaffirm its commitment to democratic values, human rights, and diversitynot just in words but in decisive action.
Beyond its axiological dimension, European support for American academics represents a pragmatic opportunity that the United States capitalised on more than 80 years ago. Following the Nazis rise to power in Germany, American universities became sanctuaries for a generation of European scholars. Figures like Albert Einstein, Enrico Fermi, Edward Teller, Eugene Wigner, John von Neumann, and Stanisław Ulam not only spearheaded the development of American nuclear capabilities through the Manhattan Project but also laid the foundations for the United States dominance in the sciences. Similarly, the arrival of intellectual giants such as Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse, Hannah Arendt, and Erich Fromm transformed American social sciences and humanities, shaping discourse for decades. Today, Europe has the chance to mirror that historical momentbecoming a safe harbour for exceptional scholars whose groundbreaking research could drive innovation and bolster its intellectual leadership on the global stage.
EU support for American researchers and academics must be paired with a fundamental shift in Europes commitment to research and development funding. At present, EU member states
allocate just 2.2% of their GDP to R&D
significantly less than Israel (5.73%), South Korea (5.22%), the United States (3.64%), Japan (3.30%), and the United Kingdom (3.19%).This shortfall is more than just a statistic; it is a strategic vulnerability. Closing this gap would enhance Europes scientific and technological competitiveness and robustly respond to the
Draghi Reports warnings, signalling that the EU is prepared to lead in global innovation.
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