Ƶ Responds to U.S. Absence from Human Rights Council Session on Political Interference in Education

June 19, 2025 9:45 am

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GENEVA – The United States today was absent from a at the United Nations Human Rights Council by Special Rapporteur on Education Farida Shaheed from a visit to the U.S. studying political interference in education.

As part of her , Shaheed expressed concerns with the “authoritarian encroachment on universities, where state power is increasingly used to penalise dissent, shape curricula and restrict open inquiry.” The report also calls on the U.S. to uphold academic freedom, recognize education as a fundamental human right, end censorship and the politicization of content, promote assembly rights and academic freedom in the context of protest in support of Palestinian rights, and prioritize mental health over punitive discipline.

Jamil Dakwar, director of the Ƶ’s Human Rights Program, had the following reaction to the U.S.’ absence:

"The United States’ decision to boycott today’s presentation by the U.N. expert on education to the Human Rights Council and her critical report on political interference in U.S. education, coupled with the continuing crackdowns on free speech and the autonomy of academic institutions, represents another dangerous low point in the Trump administration’s attack on basic human rights.

“The White House’s disengagement with U.N. human rights mechanisms and attempts to force schools and universities to bend to the administration’s will ultimately risk the erasure of hard-fought achievements promoting equal and quality education, free speech, and academic freedom.”

Under the Trump administration, the United States has disengaged with the Human Rights Council and other international institutions, and has launched one of the most abusive and aggressive assaults on human rights in U.S. presidential history

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