The Myth of the Apolitical University: Education, Power and the Lie of 
Neutrality - CounterPunch.org

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The Myth of the Apolitical University: Education, Power and the Lie of N...

Henry Giroux

In a time of war, resurgent authoritarianism, and an escalating assault on 
higher education, the language of “in...
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In a time of war, resurgent authoritarianism, and an escalating assault on 
higher education, the language of “institutional neutrality” has emerged not as 
a safeguard of academic integrity, but as one of the most effective ideological 
weapons in the campaign to depoliticize the university. In the wake of Hamas’s 
October 7 attack on Israel, the genocidal destruction of Gaza, and the return 
of Donald Trump to the presidency, universities have come under intense 
pressure to demonstrate their “balance” by retreating from political 
engagement. What has followed is not a principled defense of intellectual 
independence, but a quiet alignment with power, as institutions rush to adopt 
policies that prohibit them from taking positions on political and ethical 
issues deemed external to their “core functions.” Reports suggest that more 
than 150 universities have embraced such measures, while proposals such as the 
Trump administration’s “Compact for Higher Education” threaten to make 
institutional neutrality a condition for federal funding. Under these 
conditions, neutrality is no longer an abstract ideal; it is fast becoming an 
instrument of coercion.

The appeal to neutrality, of course, is not new. It draws its legitimacy from 
the 1967 Kalven Report, which famously asserted that “the university is the 
home and sponsor of critics; it is not itself the critic.” Yet this formulation 
depends on a fiction that collapses under historical and political scrutiny: 
that can stand outside the conflicts that actively constitute the wider 
society. In reality, there is no dimension of higher education that is not 
already political. Universities continuously make decisions about what 
knowledge counts, whose voices matter, which histories are preserved, and which 
forms of dissent are tolerated or punished. These are not neutral acts; they 
are structured by power, shaped by ideology, and embedded in larger struggles 
over the meaning and direction of public life.


What the language of neutrality does, then, is not remove politics from the 
university but conceal it. More precisely, it functions as a form of political 
cover, allowing institutions to disavow their own agency even as they engage in 
deeply political practices, disciplining student protest, sanctioning faculty 
for dissent, and in some cases, collaborating with state power in ways that 
endanger those who challenge injustice. Under the current political climate, 
this posture has taken on an especially troubling form. As universities such as 
Columbia, Northwestern, and Brown move to accommodate the demands of an 
increasingly aggressive right-wing agenda, neutrality becomes indistinguishable 
from capitulation. It serves to normalize a broader project aimed at cleansing 
higher education of dissenting voices and remaking it as a site of ideological 
conformity.

At a more fundamental level, the claim that universities can be apolitical is 
neither naïve nor innocent; it is a disingenuous fiction. There is no 
institutional decision, from the allocation of research funding to the design 
of curricula, from hiring practices to the governance of student life, that 
exists outside relations of power. To invoke neutrality in this context is to 
render those relations invisible and to legitimize decisions that would 
otherwise have to be defended as political choices. As McKenna Roberts, a 
student at Columbia University, makes clear in a striking indictment of this 
fiction:


Columbia has never been a neutral institution. From the University’s 
progressive displacement of West Harlem’s Black and Latinx residents and 
expansion of its spatial and economic domination in the neighborhood, to its 
storied history of brutalizing anti-war student protestors, one thing has 
remained clear: This University has never operated on an axis that prioritizes 
the interests of its students, faculty, staff, or the broader community. While 
the debate regarding whether or not colleges and universities should function 
as spaces of apolitical higher learning continues to swirl, there is nothing 
about education that is apolitical. A claim of institutional neutrality serves 
an explicitly ideological purpose: to make invisible the power structures at 
work and depoliticize the deeply political functionings of elite educational 
institutions like Columbia.


Roberts’s critique is not exceptional; it is diagnostic. His argument is 
crucial because it names what the discourse of neutrality attempts to erase: 
the university is not a passive observer of power, but an active participant in 
its reproduction. Neutrality does not suspend this role; it obscures it, 
allowing institutions to present politically charged decisions as if they were 
merely administrative or procedural.

This is what makes the current invocation of neutrality so dangerous. It 
emerges precisely at a moment when universities are being openly targeted by 
authoritarian forces. When political leaders such as Trump and J.D. Vance cast 
professors as the enemy, when dissent is criminalized, and when entire fields 
of study are subject to political surveillance and control, the call for 
neutrality does not defend academic freedom, it disarms it. Neutrality, in such 
a context, is not a refusal of politics; it is a form of complicity. This 
broader erasure of power sets the stage for a second move: recasting the crisis 
in higher education not as political control from above, but as excess politics 
from below.

It is against this backdrop that recent critiques of higher education, 
particularly those emerging from influential platforms such as The Chronicle of 
Higher Education, must be understood and addressed. When Len Gutkin, in his 
essay “When Professors Mistake Themselves for Revolutionaries,” insists that 
“the price of academic autonomy has always been a measure of distance from 
politics proper,” he reproduces the very illusion that sustains the current 
crisis. By framing political engagement as a threat to academic freedom, Gutkin 
not only misidentifies the problem, he redirects attention away from the far 
more consequential structural transformation reshaping higher education. This 
misdiagnosis has consequences

What Gutkin overlooks is that the crisis in higher education does not arise 
from an excess of political engagement, but from a long history of structural 
abandonment and an intensifying right-wing assault. Universities have not been 
“radicalized” by faculty; they have been reshaped by forces far more 
consequential and coercive. Over the past four decades, higher education has 
been steadily colonized by the logic of capital, redefining knowledge as a 
commodity, students as consumers, and research as a revenue stream. He is 
strikingly indifferent to the reality that this market-driven transformation is 
now being fused with a right-wing political project that imagines the 
university not as a democratic public sphere, but as a laboratory for 
ideological indoctrination, a vision openly advanced by the Trump 
administration. In this context, the call for neutrality does not protect 
academic freedom; it disarms it, functioning as a cover for the very 
authoritarian forces that seek to narrow, regulate, and ultimately suppress 
critical thought.

As Will Bunch observes, “the problem for roughly three-quarters of U.S. college 
students in public universities and community colleges is that since the 
so-called ‘Reagan revolution’ of the 1980s, state tax-dollar support for higher 
education has plummeted, by a staggering 42 percent.” In this context, as Chris 
Newfield has argued, when public funding erodes, tuition rises, adjunct labor 
proliferates, and corporate governance hollows out democratic commitments, 
fields that address history, race, inequality, and justice are not becoming 
politicized, they are rendered visible. They give language to conditions the 
neoliberal university would rather recast as technical, managerial, or neutral. 
This broader landscape is crucial because the forces reshaping higher education 
are not confined to internal disputes over activism; they are driven by 
powerful external political agendas whose reach and consequences far exceed the 
boundaries of the university itself.

In doing so, such arguments lend intellectual legitimacy to a deeply troubling 
project. They do not remove politics from the university; they help to replace 
one form of politics, rooted in critique, dissent, and democratic possibility, 
with another grounded in control, conformity, and the policing of thought. The 
real question, then, is not whether universities are political, they always 
have been, but whether they will align themselves with the forces that seek to 
narrow the space of critical inquiry or with those that insist on its expansion.

The Far Right Attack Is Not Peripheral

More troubling is the article’s relative silence regarding the escalating, 
coordinated assault on higher education by the far right. Universities are no 
longer merely criticized; they are being methodically reshaped through a 
politics of intimidation and erasure. Institutions are pressured to conform or 
face defunding. Books are banned and histories rewritten to purge structural 
critique. Diversity initiatives are dismantled or criminalized. Faculty are 
surveilled and publicly vilified. Legislatures arrogate themselves the power to 
determine what can and cannot be taught about race, gender, colonialism, and 
the meaning of democracy. Even student protest is recoded as disorder. This is 
not a culture-war skirmish; it is a struggle over whether higher education will 
sustain and defend democracy as a democratic public sphere or be reduced to an 
instrument of ideological control.

In that context, calls for “depoliticization” function less as principled 
critique than as a form of retreat. When authoritarian movements seek to 
transform universities into instruments of nationalist myth-making and civic 
illiteracy, neutrality becomes complicity. Appeals to “learning for its own 
sake” ring hollow if they ignore the political forces actively attempting to 
dismantle the conditions under which such learning is even possible.

Higher education matters precisely because it holds the promise of cultivating 
historical consciousness, ethical reasoning, and critical literacy. These 
capacities are crucial democratic public goods, equipping students not simply 
to enter markets, but to interrogate power. More importantly, they equip 
students with the knowledge and skills they need to be informed and active 
citizens, without which democracy dies. When critics lament that higher 
education has embraced advocacy, they often overlook the deeper question: 
advocacy for what? If the advocacy in question is the defense of civil rights, 
democratic memory, and human dignity, then to cast it as contamination 
misunderstands the democratic vocation of higher education itself.

Funding Is the Structural Question.

Higher education did not become politically expressive in a vacuum. It was 
starved. Public investment declined. Philanthropic foundations became 
lifelines. Universities outsourced their missions to development offices and 
branding consultants. Under such conditions, grant priorities inevitably exert 
influence. But the solution to concentrated funding power is not to frame 
social justice as the problem or to claim that higher education should free 
itself from politics or from addressing social issues.

The deeper coercion in higher education is not that scholars occasionally 
tailor language to political issues. It is that entire institutions have been 
reorganized around the curse of neoliberal market metrics, rankings, revenue 
generation, donor appeal, and return on investment. That transformation 
predates and far exceeds any shift in foundation priorities. It undermines the 
role of the university as a public good and offers no vision for how to educate 
students.

If we are concerned about intellectual independence, we must confront the 
corporatization of the university, the exploitation of contingent faculty 
labor, and the financialization of research. Otherwise, critiques of 
politicization become selective,  aimed leftward while ignoring the pervasive 
political economy that governs universities from above.

Democracy Is the Unspoken Horizon

“What ultimately troubles me about Gutkin’s attack is not that it questions 
funding strategies or ignores the escalating assaults by the far right and the 
Trump regime on public discourse, including efforts to restrict what books can 
be read, what histories can be taught, and what values can be affirmed. Debate 
is healthy. What troubles me is the normalization of the idea that higher 
education should retreat from explicit engagement with democracy at a moment 
when democracy itself is under siege.

When authoritarian forces attack universities as enemies of the nation, when 
they weaponize white nationalist narratives, when they seek to replace 
historical reckoning with myth, the call for restraint sounds eerily like an 
invitation to stand down. Students should not be trained to endure the 
dismantling of democratic institutions as spectators. They should be equipped 
to analyze, resist, and transform unjust social arrangements.

Higher education, and the humanities in particular, are not ornamental culture. 
They are public memory in action. They are the spaces in which societies 
interrogate their past, imagine alternatives, and cultivate civic courage. To 
reduce them to apolitical contemplation in the name of restoring public trust 
is to misunderstand both the crisis and the cure.

The question is not whether politics or social justice enters the classroom, it 
is already there, woven into every syllabus, every silence, every claim to 
neutrality. The real question is whether the university will defend its role as 
a crucible of critical thought and democratic possibility, or submit to the 
twin forces of market fundamentalism and resurgent authoritarianism. This is 
not a debate over pedagogy, it is a struggle over the conditions of agency 
itself: whether education will cultivate the courage to question, to remember, 
and to resist, or be hollowed out into a training ground for conformity, 
amnesia, and obedience. The university is not a refuge from these forces, it is 
one of the primary terrains on which they are fought, and what is decided there 
will echo far beyond its walls, shaping whether democracy endures as a living 
project or fades into a managed illusion.

Henry A. Giroux


  


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