| Support NCAC Now | |
EXPRESS YOURSELF! |
The information presented here by the National
Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) may be freely redistributed in its entirety,
provided that readers are informed that the information was obtained from
NCAC's World Wide Web site and that credit is given to the appropriate source
of whatever information is used. Permission is expressly granted for the information
obtained to be made available for file transfer from installations offering
unrestricted anonymous file transfer on the Internet. Information found here
may not be sold for profit or incorporated in commercial documents without
the written permission from the National Coalition Against Censorship. LAST UPDATED APRIL 2005
|
NCAC Censorship News Issue #106: The Trouble With "Balance" Few people would contest the value of an even-handed, fair-minded discussion of an issue. Such a balanced approach has been critical, for instance, to efforts to assure that underrepresented groups get a chance to be heard alongside dominant voices. Lately, however, the notion of “balance” is increasingly used to control public debate over controversial topics by silencing dissenting voices. As we have reported previously (CN#97), “balance” has become the stalking horse for efforts to undermine academic freedom, to pressure journalists to self-censor or tone down critical reporting, and to justify censorship of art. What the proponents of "balance" demand is that any expression on a controversial topic be accompanied by opposing views, no matter how prevalent the latter may already be in public discourse. Frequently, the demand for “balance” results in the cancellation of the entire discussion.Such situations suggest that the rhetoric of balance has been co-opted as a subtle and insidious disguise for censorship. Few topics are more contentious – and more frequently bombarded by demands for “balance” (or “context”) – than matters touching on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The wave of cancellations of programs around Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer’s book, The Israel Lobby, is a case in point. The Center for the Humanities at CUNY and the Chicago Council on Global Affairs were among the institutions that canceled scheduled events to accompany the book’s publication because they felt it was too controversial to discuss in the absence of a critic, and the critics were either unavailable or unwilling to come.
|