Experts fear that the crackdown on academic freedom in Turkey will be followed by a drive towards the Islamisation of campuses, after the country鈥檚 president accused one of its top universities of failing to 鈥渓ean on national values鈥.
Recep Tayyip Erdo臒an鈥檚 claim in a speech that academics at Bo臒azi莽i University聽in Istanbul are against 鈥淭urkish values鈥 and the Turkish state has drawn criticism from student groups and from the institution鈥檚 former rector, and it has also prompted some observers to suggest that the president expects to reshape a sector already reeling from the dismissal and arrest of thousands of academics for alleged sympathy towards Kurds or the exiled cleric Fethullah G眉len, who is blamed for a failed 2016 coup attempt.
Umut 脰zkirimli, a guest professor at Sweden鈥檚聽Lund University聽who has written on Turkey鈥檚 academic crackdown, said that the comments could be a 鈥渉arbinger鈥 of a broader purge at the university, where some faculties are perceived to be sympathetic to Turkish Kurds.
Some of the most prominent members of Academics for Peace, a group that in 2016 publicly condemned a Turkish government offensive in Kurdish areas of the country, have come from聽Bo臒azi莽i 鈥 and have been subsequently arrested.
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鈥淲e were expecting this to happen,鈥 Professor 脰zkirimli said of the president鈥檚 speech. 鈥淗e has a strategy in his mind鈥here鈥檚 an order in what he鈥檚 doing.鈥
Mr Erdo臒an鈥檚 rhetoric is still couched in nationalist rather than religious terms to avoid alienating overseas allies, but the president 鈥渧ery clearly鈥 has an Islamist agenda,聽Professor 脰zkirimli added. The anti-intellectual tone of the Turkish government is 鈥渄riving the brightest minds out鈥 of the country, he said.
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In practical terms, Turkish universities could even see the introduction of prayer spaces, gender-segregated canteens and restrictions on women鈥檚 dress, as well as more teaching of theology and the banning of Darwinism and evolution from campus curricula, he speculated. The teaching of evolution has already been cut back in secondary schools.
Mr Erdo臒an also commented that聽Bo臒azi莽i and the francophone Galatasaray University, also based in Istanbul, were being held back by largely failing to teach in Turkish.
Faruk Birtek, professor emeritus at Bo臒azi莽i鈥檚 department of sociology, said that the institution鈥檚 state funding had already been reduced, leaving no funds for student services 鈥 the student cinema club has 鈥渞un out of money鈥, for example. 鈥淲e are starving,鈥 he said. The university 鈥渋s becoming much weaker and鈥osing its prestige鈥, although it still remained highly respected, he added.
The government has already set up 20 to 30 Islamic or nationally focused universities, Professor Birtek said, which 鈥渃reates slots for their people鈥 to gain faculty positions.
鈥淗e [Mr Erdo臒an] doesn鈥檛 have to destroy universities [like聽Bo臒azi莽i], but he creates his own scheme of universities and professors,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a battle against secular Turkey.鈥
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This speech is not the first sign of increasing government control of Turkey鈥檚 top universities. In November 2016, the president claimed the power to directly name university rectors, and in the same month he appointed Mehmed 脰zkan, the university鈥檚 vice-president, to the role at Bo臒azi莽i.
But not everyone sees a wider strategy for higher education in the president鈥檚 recent comments. The statements are typical of the governing party鈥檚 鈥渂ullying approach鈥, said Kumru Toktamis, a Turkish human rights researcher and associate professor at the Pratt Institute in the US, and are used to 鈥渟end a message鈥 to higher education institutions and to pacify dissent.
According to Gulcin Ozkan, an economics professor at the聽University of York聽and a critic of Turkey鈥檚 academic 鈥減urge鈥, many of the government鈥檚 recently founded universities also teach in English, so the president鈥檚 comments were unlikely to presage a switch to Turkish. Instead, they 鈥渘eed to be seen in the wider context of the current climate in the country with much curtailed civil liberties and no tolerance for dissent鈥, she said.
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Mr Erdo臒an has said that he wants to raise a religiously 鈥減ious generation鈥 and has shifted the school curriculum away from secularist content. Janroj Yilmaz Keles, a research fellow at聽Middlesex University聽with a focus on Turkey and Kurds, said that the president wished to impose these ideas on universities and academics as well.
If universities are forced to lean on 鈥渘ational鈥 or 鈥淚slamic鈥 values, 鈥渢hen how can these universities be a 鈥榞lobal brand鈥?鈥 as Mr Erdo臒an intends, he asked.
The president鈥檚 鈥渋deological attacks鈥 on universities and 鈥渞eligious-nationalist approaches鈥 can 鈥渙nly damage the reputations of the good universities鈥 in Turkey, Dr Keles said, which had in any event been weakened by the earlier mass dismissal of academics.
In addition to dismissals and arrests, the government has closed several universities and imposed travel bans on many academics in the wake of the failed coup.
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