Protect free speech or lose cash, New Zealand universities warned

Free tuition also to be switched from first to last year of tertiary study, under pact between new governing parties

十一月 24, 2023
Wellington, New Zealand - February 25, 2013 Lion outside the Beehive building - Parliament of New Zealand in Wellington city as view from Wellington Citizens War Memorial on February 25, 2013.
Source: iStock

New Zealand universities will lose government funding unless they publicly embrace free speech, under plans negotiated by constituent parties of the incoming government.

A coalition agreement between the National Party and its junior partner, the Association of Consumers and Taxpayers (Act) Party, outlines an intention to amend the Education and Training Act “such that tertiary education providers receiving taxpayer funding must commit to a free speech policy”.

The agreement also contains a commitment to change the “fees-free” policy so that tuition charges are waived for the final, rather than the first, year of tertiary studies.

An agreement National has reached with its other coalition partner, New Zealand First, likewise commits to altering the fees-free arrangement after 2024. The new government will “protect freedom of speech” by ruling out hate speech legislation, it adds.

The Free Speech Union labelled the proposed scuttling of the “unavoidably subjective” hate speech laws and the imposition of a free speech policy as “huge wins”.

“One of the sectors where censorship is most blatant and speech least free is universities,” said chief executive Jonathan Ayling. “If academics and their students are not free to consider unconventional ideas and dissent from the status quo, we’ll never move forward.

“Tertiary education has become an environment where self-censorship is the norm, not the exception, and we all suffer as a result.”

The Tertiary Education Union said the policy was unnecessary. “Our legislation protects academic freedom,” tweeted national secretary Sandra Grey. “Could we just focus on that being protected so it can be used!”

Opinion also varied over the fees-free change. While back-ending it could incentivise students to finish their courses, a critic tweeted that the proposed approach was “just gatekeeping people out of tertiary so the already well off continue to get ahead and everyone else has less opportunity to advance themselves”.

National’s agreement with New Zealand First also commits to winding back references to the Treaty of Waitangi and resisting policies that “seek to ascribe different rights and responsibilities to New Zealanders on the basis of their race or ancestry”.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (3)

Such a policy will be deterrant to the most vulnerable people, as they will have no any financial support to enter tertiary education. It is the first country I become aware that financial support or fees-waving is placed for the final of the education degree.
Is the NZ coalition blind to the irony of imposing a free speech policy?
Ja_Quintero_unesco your comment betrays ignorance about how Tertiary education operates in NZ. Any applicant accepted for most fee paying longer duration courses can apply for a non-means tested zero interest student loan tocover fees (obviously there are limits to how many times). Further, those of limited means can get weekly $upport - also non refundable. The notion that there is a high financial barrier to enter Tertiary study in NZ is incorrect.
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