Sarah McLaughlin is a senior scholar of global expression at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (Philadelphia).
Description
Authoritarians in the Academy is one of those books that turns over a lot of rocks, exposing the unpleasant things going on underneath...The book deserves a wide readership.
— National Review
[Authoritarians in the Academy] thoroughly and thoughtfully explains the fall of free speech in the university, and it soon becomes clear to the reader that this tale is not dissimilar to that of other confrontations between liberal democracies and totalitarian states.
— Washington Examiner
As universities globalize, authoritarian regimes export censorship to American campuses. In Authoritarians in the Academy, Sarah McLaughlin unsparingly exposes how foreign pressure, self-censorship, and administrative complicity threaten academic freedom—challenging the notion that universities remain safe havens for open debate. A timely warning from the front lines of global free expression.
— Jacob Mchangama, Executive Director of The Future of Free Speech and author of Free Speech: a History from Socrates to Social Media
Essential reading for understanding how authoritarians abroad are limiting the freedom to think, teach, and learn at US universities. McLaughlin expertly shows how the sensitivity discourse prevalent on campuses is invoked to serve the censorious impulses of foreign regimes. With authoritarianism ascendant at home, this book is even more relevant.
— Amna Khalid, Carleton College

