posted on 2025-08-11, 02:14authored byOscar Westlund, Matt Carlson, Basyouni Hamada, Natali Helberger, Sophie Lecheler, Seth C Lewis, Thorsten Quandt, Stephen D Reese, Ramón Salaverría, Magdalena Saldaña, Terrell ThomsonTerrell Thomson, Karin Wahl-Jorgensen, Shangyuan Wu
This article addresses the growing global assault on academic freedom—cornerstones of democratic societies now under increasing threat from authoritarian regimes. It highlights a global decline in that freedom since its peak 20 years ago, focusing on the United States in 2025 to illustrate rapidly escalating academic silencing, even in a country with well-established democratic freedoms and institutions. Drawing on the collective expertise of international scholars in digital journalism studies (DJS)—a field situated at the crossroads of vulnerable institutions—and informed by anonymous reports from U.S.-based academics, this commentary examines the impact of political interference, censorship, and self-censorship in academia. It argues that DJS as a field must develop approaches that actively resist authoritarianism and uphold freedom of expression and inquiry. The commentary concludes with a normative framework suggesting how scholars should collectively do this. We propose a three-pronged approach to defending the larger field, the scholarship within it, and the wellbeing of individual scholars of digital journalism studies.<p></p>
This is an original manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Digital Journalism on 04/07/2025, available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/21670811.2025.2527997.