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âAtriumâ Editor: Iâm âNot Moving Forwardâ With Journal Under Prior Review Requirement
Professor Katie Watson, editor of the embattled Atrium journal at Northwestern University, has taken a strong stance against the universityâs demand for prior review of the journalâs content.
As we announced in a press release last week, officials at Northwestern University have demanded prior review of the faculty-produced bioethics journal Atrium after it published describingâin the context of a discussion of disability and sexualityâhow he received consensual oral sex from a nurse while undergoing rehabilitation after his paralysis at the age of 18. The theme of that issue of Atrium was âBad Girls,â and it was guest-edited by Alice Dreger, a clinical professor in the Medical Humanities & Bioethics program at Northwesternâs Feinberg School of Medicine.
Northwesternâs initial response to the controversy over Peaceâs essay was to remove the âBad Girlsâ issue of Atrium from the universityâs website altogether. Facing pressure from the university, the bioethics program removed all previously published issues, as well. After Dreger informed Northwestern that she intended to publicize the universityâs censorship of the journal, the university restored online access to Atrium, but formed an oversight committee tasked with reviewing future Atrium content.
Northwestern has , calling it âan editorial board of faculty members and others, as is customary for academic journals.â As The Huffington Postâs Tyler Kingkade reports, however, Atrium editor Watson (who is a Feinberg School of Medicine bioethics professor) by the university. According to Watson, the committee with whom she met included medical school administrators as well as someone from the medical schoolâs communications department.
Watson said medical school administrators told her she must allow a âvetting committeeâ to review her editorial choices âand veto them if they were perceived to conflict with other institutional interests.â
âApproximately a week after this vetting committee told me what I would, and would not, be allowed to publish, I canceled the issue,â Watson told HuffPost, explaining she is ânot moving forward with the publication under that condition.â
With the university holding firm on its prior review requirement, Kingkade reports that Atriumâs future is uncertain:
Watson is considering ways to make Atrium independent, to find another publisher, or to close the journal permanently.
âI work with good people in both the medical school and the hospital, and I remain hopeful,â Watson wrote. âBut if I become convinced Atrium can no longer move forward with integrity here, I will drop the publicationâs MH&B and NU affiliations and move it elsewhere, or I'll throw a party for the terrific run it enjoyed and end it.â
If a faculty-produced bioethics journal cannot freely discuss thorny ethical issues like the ones raised in Peaceâs article, there is no academic freedom at Northwestern University. We commend Katie Watson and Alice Dreger for their commitment to academic freedom and we sorely hope that Northwestern University ultimately decides to do the right thing and drop its demand for editorial control of Atrium.
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