
In 1959, the Apartheid government passed the Extension of the University Education Act, despite opposition by UCT staff and students, past and present (and also at other universities like Wits in Johannesburg). This act took away the freedom of universities to choose who to admit, a way of barring black students. The university erected a plaque in 1960, the Latin plaque, to mark the shameful day, and the TB Davie Academic Freedom Lecture was instituted to recall this loss every year. In 1968 academic freedom at UCT was further restricted when the state compelled UCT to overturn its decision to appoint a black academic, Archie Mafeje, to its staff. This second restriction of UCT’s academic freedom is commemorated by the 1968 Latin plaque. During the 1970s and 1980s the state’s grip on academic and personal freedoms tightened even more, producing open resistance by numbers of students and staff and bitter clashes with the police. Since 1990 the state’s overt restrictions on academic freedom at UCT have been withdrawn.
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Thanks for a most interesting and informative read. The picture is quite impressive too.
ReplyDeleteIt's ASTONISHING how much has changed for the good in the past few decades!
ReplyDeleteROG, ABC Wednesday team
I always find UCT an interesting and beautiful sight on the slopes of Devil's Peak.
ReplyDeleteA wonderful photo. And a truly wonderful occasion.
ReplyDeleteDonna - ABC Team