{"id":2633,"date":"2026-06-09T19:18:00","date_gmt":"2026-06-09T19:18:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power\/"},"modified":"2026-06-09T19:18:00","modified_gmt":"2026-06-09T19:18:00","slug":"higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power\/","title":{"rendered":"Higher education must not become a research arm of militarized power"},"content":{"rendered":"<br><figure><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"683\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/GettyImages-2151325614-scaled.jpg?fit=1024%2C683&amp;ssl=1\" class=\"attachment-rss-image-size size-rss-image-size wp-post-image\" alt=\"A pro-Palestine protester holds a placard that says, &quot;No more research for IOF (Israeli Occupation Forces)&quot; during the rally. Rallies and protest camps persist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) campus as student demonstrators demand divestment from Israeli military ties. Photo by Vincent Ricci\/SOPA Images\/LightRocket via Getty Images\" data-attachment-id=\"344188\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/therealnews.com\/higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power\/a-pro-palestine-protester-holds-a-placard-that-says-no\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/GettyImages-2151325614-scaled.jpg?fit=2560%2C1707&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"2560,1707\" data-comments-opened=\"0\" data-image-meta=\"{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;5&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;SOPA Images\/LightRocket via Gett&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;ILCE-7M3&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS, UNITED STATES - 2024\/05\/06: A pro-Palestine protester holds a placard that says, \\&quot;No more research for IOF (Israeli Occupation Forces)\\&quot; during the rally. Rallies and protest camps persist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) campus as student demonstrators demand divestment from Israeli military ties. President Sally Kornbluth set a deadline for encampment removal by May 6, 2024, threatening suspension. Despite this, a rally outside the encampment grew, with some breaking down fences to re-enter. Additionally, high school students staged a walkout, blocking Massachusetts Avenue and MIT&#039;s administration building steps for hours. (Photo by Vincent Ricci\/SOPA Images\/LightRocket via Getty Images)&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;1714953600&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;\\u00a9 2024 SOPA Images&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;24&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;400&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0.0025&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;A pro-Palestine protester holds a placard that says, \\&quot;No&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;1&quot;,&quot;alt&quot;:&quot;&quot;}\" data-image-title=\"A pro-Palestine protester holds a placard that says, &amp;#8220;No\" data-image-description=\"\" data-image-caption=\"&lt;p&gt;A pro-Palestine protester holds a placard that says, &amp;#8220;No more research for IOF (Israeli Occupation Forces)&amp;#8221; during the rally. Rallies and protest camps persist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) campus as student demonstrators demand divestment from Israeli military ties. Photo by Vincent Ricci\/SOPA Images\/LightRocket via Getty Images&lt;\/p&gt;\n\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/GettyImages-2151325614-scaled.jpg?fit=780%2C520&amp;ssl=1\" \/><\/figure>\n<div class=\"wp-block-media-text is-stacked-on-mobile\" style=\"grid-template-columns:33% auto\"><figure class=\"wp-block-media-text__media\"><img decoding=\"async\" data-recalc-dims=\"1\" width=\"780\" height=\"218\" data-attachment-id=\"277549\" data-permalink=\"https:\/\/therealnews.com\/half-a-million-south-korean-workers-walk-off-jobs-in-general-strike\/truthout-logo\" data-orig-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/truthout-logo.jpeg?fit=874%2C244&amp;ssl=1\" data-orig-size=\"874,244\" data-comments-opened=\"0\" data-image-meta=\"{&quot;aperture&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;credit&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;camera&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;caption&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;created_timestamp&quot;:&quot;1634742558&quot;,&quot;copyright&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;focal_length&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;iso&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;shutter_speed&quot;:&quot;0&quot;,&quot;title&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;orientation&quot;:&quot;1&quot;}\" data-image-title=\"truthout-logo\" data-image-description=\"\" data-image-caption=\"\" data-large-file=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/truthout-logo.jpeg?fit=780%2C218&amp;ssl=1\" src=\"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/therealnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/10\/truthout-logo.jpeg?resize=780%2C218&#038;ssl=1\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-277549 size-full\" \/><\/figure><div class=\"wp-block-media-text__content\">\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\"><em>This article was originally published by <a href=\"https:\/\/truthout.org\/articles\/higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Truthout<\/a> on June 08, 2026. It is shared here under a <em>\u00a0<\/em><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-nd\/4.0\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)<\/a> license.<\/em><\/p>\n<\/div><\/div>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-drop-cap wp-block-paragraph\">What happens to higher education when institutions dedicated to critical thought increasingly align themselves with the logics of war, surveillance, and national security? Unless we mount an organized resistance, we may viscerally experience the answer to this question all too soon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">We are already watching this transformation play out in both the U.S. and Canada as universities face growing pressure to align their missions, research agendas, and pedagogical practices with the values, priorities, and imperatives of a society increasingly organized around the logic of war.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Militarized policies, values, identities, and modes of governance no longer merely creep into U.S. society. Under the Trump administration, they increasingly define it. Militarization now extends far beyond the battlefield, reshaping everyday life, public institutions, and the very meaning of citizenship.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.counterpunch.org\/2026\/03\/20\/trumps-crusade-christian-nationalism-and-the-making-of-a-holy-war\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">War is celebrated as a moral imperative, often wrapped in the language of religious righteousness and white Christian nationalism<\/a>. Due process gives way to abductions and arbitrary detention, dissent is met with threats and repression, soldiers occupy U.S. cities, and political violence is normalized through a steady stream of incendiary rhetoric and state-sponsored spectacles that glorify force, exclusion, and domination. Democratic ideals are displaced by a culture of fear, manufactured insecurity, and the belief that the nation is besieged by enemies both within and beyond its borders \u2014 largely immigrants and people of color.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In this militarized landscape, critical thought is derided, informed judgment is replaced by ideological conformity, and institutions charged with nurturing democratic agency increasingly come under attack. This fusion of militarism, toxic masculinity, religious fundamentalism, and white nationalist politics functions as a powerful form of public pedagogy, producing the authoritarian values, identities, and modes of agency that have historically provided the cultural foundations for fascist politics.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 id=\"h-the-dangers-of-the-military-industrial-academic-complex\" class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Dangers of the \u201cMilitary-Industrial-Academic Complex\u201d<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The late U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned of the dangers posed by what he called the \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.taylorfrancis.com\/books\/mono\/10.4324\/9781315631363\/university-chains-henry-giroux\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">military-industrial-academic complex<\/a>.\u201d In an earlier draft of his famous 1961 farewell address on the military-industrial complex, Eisenhower included the word \u201cacademic,\u201d recognizing that universities could become deeply entangled with military power, corporate interests, and state security agendas in ways that threatened their intellectual independence and democratic mission.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">This warning extends to countries that increasingly live in the shadow of the U.S.\u2019s expanding warfare state and its militarized culture. For instance, against an increasingly militarized global order, the Canadian government has unveiled an expansive \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.canada.ca\/en\/department-national-defence\/corporate\/reports-publications\/industrial-strategy\/security-sovereignty-prosperity.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Defence Industrial Strategy<\/a>\u201d backed by 81.8 billion Canadian dollars (around 60 billion in U.S. dollars) in new defense spending in Budget 2025, including 6.6 billion Canadian dollars devoted specifically to expanding the country\u2019s defense-industrial infrastructure. The strategy marks the largest long-term expansion of Canada\u2019s military economy since the Second World War.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">What once appeared to be limited partnerships between North American universities and defense industries has evolved into a far broader transformation of higher education itself. As Canada dramatically expands military\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.canada.ca\/en\/department-national-defence\/corporate\/reports-publications\/industrial-strategy\/security-sovereignty-prosperity.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">spending through its Defence Industrial Strategy<\/a>, universities are increasingly being drawn into the orbit of defense priorities. Federal initiatives encourage partnerships between universities, defense contractors, and government agencies in fields such as artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, quantum computing, autonomous systems, and advanced surveillance technologies. Research funding is increasingly directed toward projects framed around national security, defense innovation, and military competitiveness. As these priorities gain influence, higher education is being reshaped by the social logics of militarization, technological control, and permanent security, altering not only what knowledge is produced but also the purposes to which it is put, raising urgent questions about the future of the university as a democratic public sphere.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote alignright\"><blockquote><p>Militarized knowledge production blurs the line between education and warfare, transforming universities into laboratories for the development of technologies whose ultimate purpose is often surveillance, social control, and lethal violence.<\/p><\/blockquote><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The growing use of drones and AI-driven warfare systems is not simply a military development.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.cigionline.org\/articles\/militarizing-ai-how-to-catch-the-digital-dragon\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">It signals a broader transformation in how research and knowledge are produced, funded, and valued<\/a>. As universities deepen their involvement in military research, fields ranging from artificial intelligence and data analytics to robotics and cybersecurity are increasingly organized around the imperatives of surveillance, security, and warfare. AI technologies are already being deployed by state agencies to monitor migrants, journalists, activists, and political dissidents, while drones have revolutionized warfare by making it cheaper, more remote, and less accountable. Under such conditions, knowledge is not viewed primarily as a public good serving democratic life. Instead, it is increasingly organized around military imperatives of prediction, control, targeting, and domination. The result is a form of militarized knowledge production that blurs the line between education and warfare, transforming universities into laboratories for the development of\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.wsj.com\/podcasts\/tech-news-briefing\/domestic-surveillance-is-expanding-with-new-ai-powered-tools\/fc4de4a3-f759-46e6-ab79-0ba4e9acf71a\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">technologies whose ultimate purpose is often surveillance, social control, and lethal violence<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\"><a href=\"https:\/\/yalebooks.yale.edu\/book\/9780300072631\/in-the-shadow-of-war\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Michael S. Sherry<\/a>\u00a0rightly argues that in an age in which state power is increasingly organized through militarized values and security logics, military culture now shapes not only state policy but \u201cbroad areas of national life.\u201d As\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/muse.jhu.edu\/article\/532824\/summary\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">David Theo Goldberg<\/a>\u00a0argues, militarization no longer operates only through armies and weapons systems. It increasingly shapes culture, technology, modes of governance, and everyday life. As Goldberg observes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The military is not just a fighting machine\u2026. It serves and socializes. It hands down to society, as big brother might, its more or less perfected goods, from gunpowder to guns, computing to information management \u2026 In short, while militarily produced instruments might be retooled to other, broader social purposes, the military shapes pretty much the entire range of social production from commodities to culture, social goods to social theory.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The implications for higher education are profound. Militarization does not simply reshape culture, technology, and governance. It also reorganizes the production of knowledge itself, aligning university research with the imperatives of surveillance, security, and warfare while legitimating authoritarian forms of power.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.brennancenter.org\/our-work\/research-reports\/militarys-use-ai-explained\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence research tied to military and surveillance applications<\/a>\u00a0deepens these dangers. Universities are increasingly helping to develop technologies used for predictive policing, automated warfare, mass surveillance, and forms of digital authoritarianism that blur the line between security and repression. Such developments are routinely justified in the language of innovation, efficiency, and national security, yet they raise profound ethical questions about the role of higher education in designing technologies that deepen inequality, expand state violence, erode civil liberties, and facilitate the killing of civilians, including children, in conflicts largely removed from public scrutiny.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote alignleft has-text-align-right\"><blockquote><p>The militarization of the university is not simply a matter of research contracts or funding priorities. It is pedagogical, cultural, and deeply political.<\/p><\/blockquote><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The militarization of the university is not simply a matter of research contracts or funding priorities. It is pedagogical, cultural, and deeply political. Universities do more than train workers; they shape civic identities, ethical sensibilities, and the capacity for democratic agency itself. When higher education embraces military partnerships and military-driven research agendas, it legitimates a worldview in which security eclipses justice, technological efficiency displaces ethical reflection, and dissent is recast as a threat rather than a democratic necessity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">How Militarization Reorganizes the Production of Knowledge<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As militarization becomes woven into the fabric of political culture, universities increasingly reorganize knowledge, research priorities, and technological innovation around the assumptions of permanent conflict, geopolitical competition, and security management. In doing so, higher education normalizes the belief that militarized knowledge and military solutions should govern everyday life. Yet militarization does not merely reshape research priorities and institutional culture. It also reorganizes historical memory, civic identity, and the very terms through which democracy is understood.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Militarization also bears heavily on the production of knowledge itself<a href=\"https:\/\/www.nybooks.com\/articles\/2025\/07\/24\/a-show-of-force-fintan-otoole\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">. As Fintan O\u2019Toole observes<\/a>, contemporary authoritarian movements do more than expand military power; they seek to reshape historical memory and civic consciousness. Shameful histories are recast as heroic achievements, while assaults on democracy are reimagined as acts of patriotism. The Confederate rebellion is transformed from a defense of slavery into a noble cause, much as the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol is increasingly celebrated by its defenders as a patriotic uprising rather than an assault on democratic institutions. Equally troubling are efforts to remake the military itself through demands that soldiers be trained for loyalty to political leaders rather than to constitutional principles. Here, power seeks not only to command institutions but also to militarize knowledge, memory, and civic identity. Universities have a crucial responsibility to resist such distortions by defending historical truth, critical inquiry, and the capacity to distinguish education from propaganda.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/kevinbaker.info\/the-party-of-huah\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Kevin Baker<\/a>\u00a0notes, military solutions increasingly displace diplomacy, democratic institutions, and other civic responses to social problems. Within a culture saturated by militarism, aggression is celebrated as prevention, repression is justified in the name of security, and military force is invoked to discipline dissent and erode democratic values. Under such conditions, education is organized less around the imperatives of democratic culture than around the demands of the arms industry, surveillance systems, technological acceleration, and the national security state.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">These developments become even more troubling when they intersect with the ongoing marketization of higher education. At its best, higher education functions as a democratic public sphere, a place where students learn to think critically, question authority, engage history, and imagine alternative democratic futures. Yet under the pressures of neoliberalism, universities have increasingly abandoned this mission. Education is now often reduced to job training, students are treated as consumers, faculty are deskilled and casualized, and learning is defined largely in instrumental terms. Questions about how education might nurture civic courage, ethical imagination, social responsibility, and democratic agency are increasingly sidelined in a market-driven university culture.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Yet the assault on higher education is not only economic. It is also ideological and political. In recent years, a growing chorus of liberal and conservative critics has claimed that universities have lost their way, charging that the humanities and critical scholarship have corrupted higher education through ideology and activism. Under the seductive language of \u201creform,\u201d \u201cbalance,\u201d \u201ccivility,\u201d \u201cinstitutional trust,\u201d and \u201cneutrality,\u201d these critics present themselves as defenders of academic integrity while advancing a profoundly reactionary project.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.chronicle.com\/article\/how-humanists-helped-wreck-the-humanities?sra=true\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">In some cases, liberal critics go so far as to treat \u201csocial justice\u201d as a threat to scholarship<\/a>\u00a0rather than asking how power, exclusion, race, gender, class, empire, and inequality have always shaped what counts as knowledge. Their calls for neutrality, which function as a cover for depoliticization, do not protect intellectual freedom; they align with a broader assault on critical thought, historical memory, and democratic culture. They are aghast at the notion put forward by\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theatlantic.com\/ideas\/2025\/12\/humanities-crisis-ai-camus\/685233\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Thomas Chatterton Williams<\/a>\u00a0that \u201cFor humanities departments [and higher education in general] to continue to matter, they must challenge the modern world rather than accommodate it.\u201d In doing so, they obscure the\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bloomsbury.com\/ca\/disappearing-futures-9781350603042\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">far more dangerous attacks<\/a>\u00a0on higher education coming from the right: censorship, book bans, assaults on DEI programs, the repression of student protest, and efforts to align universities with corporate, state, and military interests.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Critical scholarship is condemned as ideological, while militarized research, donor influence, state-directed threats of defunding, and forms of ideological indoctrination are celebrated as common sense. The real danger is not that universities have become too political, but that they are being stripped of their democratic mission and transformed into institutions that normalize conformity, surveillance, militarization, and authoritarian power. Higher education is not under attack because it has been ruined by the left. On the contrary, it is under assault by the Trump administration and a broader network of far right forces precisely because it keeps alive a dangerous truth: education is not merely about credentials, careers, or conformity to the status quo. At its best, it cultivates the capacity for critical judgment, informed dissent, compassion, and democratic agency. What authoritarian movements fear most is not ideological indoctrination but an educated public capable of questioning power, holding authority accountable, and imagining a more just future.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Militarization deepens anti-democratic tendencies. Research is increasingly tied to military applications, geopolitical competition, and outside funding rather than to the public good. Universities adopt the language of security, risk management, efficiency, and competitiveness while corporate and military values increasingly shape institutional priorities.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.thesimonsfoundation.ca\/highlights\/opportunities-and-warning-signs-along-militarization-highway\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">As a Simons Foundation policy briefing warns<\/a>, militarization has increasingly become a \u201cdefault response\u201d to political instability and global insecurity, reinforcing a culture in which social problems are framed through the logics of surveillance, strategic competition, and military preparedness rather than diplomacy, public investment, and democratic cooperation. As\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/reedgalen.substack.com\/p\/the-costs-of-war-with-brown-university\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Professor Catherine Lutz<\/a>\u00a0notes, such actions run the risk of eroding legal and moral boundaries. In such a climate, higher education loses its civic character and becomes subordinated to the interests of the warfare state and defense industries.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">As universities become increasingly tied to military and security logics, they risk abandoning their civic purpose in favor of a pedagogy of permanent emergency, one that privileges surveillance, strategic competition, and technological domination over critical inquiry, civic imagination, ethical responsibility, and social solidarity. What disappears in this militarized vision of higher education is the conviction that universities should cultivate informed citizens capable of holding power accountable rather than simply servicing the imperatives of the national security state.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Equally troubling, militarization reshapes the culture of the university itself. Militarized institutions reward conformity, secrecy, technocratic thinking, and instrumental rationality. Ethical questions about violence, disposability, colonialism, and state power are pushed aside in favor of managerial efficiency and national competitiveness. Students protesting Israel\u2019s war in Gaza, settler colonialism, genocide, sexual violence, or war crimes are too often met not with dialogue\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/canadiandimension.com\/articles\/view\/a-warning-about-civil-liberties-on-canadian-university-campuses\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">but with surveillance, administrative repression, and policing.<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote alignright\"><blockquote><p>The dominance of war-like values in both higher education and the wider civic culture prepares \u201ccivil society itself for the production of violence.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">In such instances, the university ceases to function as a space for critical engagement and becomes instead an extension of a broader authoritarian culture.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/nnomypeace.net\/2018-02-05-21-40-21\/article-archive2\/jorge-mariscal\/item\/473-the-militarization-of-us-culture.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">As scholar John Gills<\/a>\u00a0notes, the dominance of war-like values in both higher education and the wider civic culture prepares \u201ccivil society itself for the production of violence.\u201d In this way, universities risk becoming agents of militarized socialization rather than sites of democratic education. Such developments raise not only political and educational concerns but also urgent ethical questions about the kinds of institutions that universities are becoming and the values they choose to endorse.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The militarization of higher education raises a profound ethical question: What happens when universities enter into partnerships with military institutions while remaining silent about documented human rights abuses associated with those same institutions? Such silence is never politically neutral. It suggests that violations of human rights can be overlooked, rationalized, or normalized when carried out in the name of security, defense, or national interest.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">This issue extends beyond universities themselves and raises broader questions about the responsibilities of democratic governments. As Canada, among other countries, deepens military cooperation with allies and expands investments in defense industries, it cannot exempt those relationships from ethical scrutiny. If credible allegations of war crimes, torture, collective punishment, or sexual violence are ignored in the name of strategic alliances or national security, democratic principles are hollowed out from within. Universities, precisely because they are charged with fostering critical inquiry and ethical judgment, have a responsibility to challenge such silences rather than reproduce them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">These ethical concerns become especially urgent when universities maintain relationships with institutions implicated in serious human rights abuses. The issue is particularly troubling in light of allegations regarding the use of sexual violence against Palestinians.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/05\/11\/opinion\/israel-palestinians-sexual-violence.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Writing in\u00a0<em>The New York Times<\/em>, Nicholas Kristof<\/a>\u00a0noted that while there is no evidence that Israeli leaders explicitly order rape,\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.un.org\/unispal\/document\/conflict-related-sexual-violence-report-of-the-secretary-general-s-2025-389\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">United Nations investigators have reported that sexual violence has become one of Israel\u2019s \u201cstandard operating procedures\u201d<\/a>\u00a0in the mistreatment of Palestinians. Other human rights organizations have reached similarly disturbing conclusions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Such allegations also raise broader concerns about how security regimes can be used not only against occupied populations but also against those who challenge state policies.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.reuters.com\/world\/europe\/freed-gaza-flotilla-activists-allege-israeli-abuse-including-rape-2026-05-22\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Reuters<\/em>\u00a0reported<\/a>\u00a0that organizers of a flotilla attempting to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza alleged that some activists detained by Israeli authorities experienced physical abuse and that at least 15 reported sexual assaults, including allegations of rape.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/zeteo.com\/p\/11-harrowing-video-testimonies-from\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>Zeteo<\/em>\u00a0provided shocking and wrenching video testimonies<\/a>\u00a0from some of the activists, largely ignored by Western media. Whatever the final findings regarding these allegations, they underscore the need for independent scrutiny of security institutions and the dangers of granting them unquestioned legitimacy in the name of national defense. When accusations of abuse are met with silence rather than investigation, the boundaries between security, impunity, and state-sanctioned violence become increasingly blurred.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">If universities claim to uphold principles of human rights, social responsibility, and ethical inquiry, they cannot selectively ignore such evidence when it implicates states or institutions with which they maintain research, military, or security partnerships. To do so risks transforming universities from spaces of critical inquiry into institutions that legitimate power while remaining silent about its abuses. At stake is more than the question of particular research contracts. It is the moral integrity of higher education itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">These concerns are not confined to particular institutions or isolated abuses. They are symptomatic of a broader culture in which militarized values increasingly shape public life, political discourse, and social priorities. From sporting events and military recruitment in schools to popular films, social media spectacles, gun culture, and state-sponsored propaganda, aggression, domination, and war are normalized as features of everyday life.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Nowhere is this more visible than in the influence of Trump\u2019s\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/commentisfree\/2026\/mar\/28\/pete-hegseth-violence-religion-israel-iran\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, who celebrates \u201cmaximum lethality, not tepid legality\u201d<\/a>\u00a0and wraps militarism in the language of white Christian nationalism and religious righteousness. As Jasper Craven observes, Hegseth champions a form of \u201cmilitary manliness\u201d stripped of any ethical center. Such a worldview elevates domination as a virtue, defines violence as a moral ideal, and transforms, in Craven\u2019s words, \u201cthe Pentagon into the staging ground for an ideological religious crusade.\u201d As these values circulate through culture and public institutions, they increasingly shape higher education itself, influencing not only what universities teach but also the forms of knowledge they produce, fund, and legitimate.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-pullquote alignleft has-text-align-right\"><blockquote><p>Universities cannot claim to defend democracy while simultaneously aligning themselves with industries and state policies organized for state violence, war, and imperial aggression.<\/p><\/blockquote><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">At the same time, vast intellectual, scientific, and\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/carleton.ca\/news\/story\/military-spending-impact-quality-of-life\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">financial resources are being diverted from urgent public needs such as climate justice, public health, democratic education, and social welfare toward the expansion of military technologies and security infrastructures<\/a>. In the process, the arms industry reaps enormous profits while universities increasingly risk becoming laboratories for aggression rather than institutions dedicated to civic responsibility, ethical imagination, and the common good.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Defenders of militarized partnerships insist that universities must remain pragmatic and \u201cneutral\u201d in securing funding and advancing national interests. But neutrality in such cases is largely a myth. Universities cannot claim to defend democracy while simultaneously aligning themselves with industries and state policies organized for state violence, war, and imperial aggression. Higher education has no legitimate ethical mandate to function as a research arm of militarized power.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Universities Must Refuse to Become Laboratories for War<\/h2>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The issue is not whether universities are political, but what kind of politics they embody and in whose interests they function. In an age marked by rising authoritarianism, widening inequality, climate catastrophe, and endless wars, universities cannot escape matters of power and values, and they must decide whether they will serve democracy or militarized power. Nor can educators retreat into the call for neutrality. At stake here is more than institutional policy. It is the fate of the university as a democratic institution. Few writers understood these dangers more clearly than\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/chrome-extension:\/\/efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj\/https:\/mail.google.com\/mail\/u\/0?ui=2&amp;ik=eaf3b5986f&amp;attid=0.1&amp;permmsgid=msg-f:1866393573101918313&amp;th=19e6c310efcfd869&amp;view=att&amp;disp=inline&amp;realattid=B63F91C1-0992-4B16-87B4-14263D7034C8&amp;zw&amp;acrobatPromotionSource=gmail_chrome-card\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Toni Morrison<\/a>, who warned: \u201cIf the university does not take seriously and rigorously its role as a guardian of wider civic freedoms, as interrogator of more and more complex ethical problems, as servant and preserver of deeper democratic practices, then some other regime or menage of regimes will do it for us, in spite of us, and without us.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Higher education may be one of the few public spheres left where knowledge, values, and learning can nurture radical hope, civic responsibility, informed agency, critical thinking, and substantive democracy. The struggle against the militarization of Canadian universities is therefore not merely a fight over funding priorities. It is a struggle over whether education will serve democracy or become an extension of the warfare state.\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.readthemaple.com\/national-coalition-promises-to-fight-canadas-war-bank\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Activists from groups like World Beyond War Canada and the Canadian Federation of Students<\/a>\u00a0are right to insist that genuine security comes not from militarism and permanent war, but from investing in education, housing, public health, and the social good.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Universities must refuse their transformation into laboratories for war, surveillance, and technological domination. At stake is whether higher education will further accommodate militarized and authoritarian power or become a crucial site of resistance, critical consciousness, and democratic possibility, one that refuses to confuse security with fear, civic responsibility with obedience, and education with the demands of war and domination. In an age when militarism increasingly shapes culture, politics, and everyday life, universities must remain among the few institutions willing to defend critical inquiry, civic responsibility, and democratic freedom against the expanding reach of the warfare state.<\/p>\r\n<br> article,education,Military Industrial Complex,Reprint,war\r\n<br><a href=\"https:\/\/therealnews.com\/higher-education-must-not-become-a-research-arm-of-militarized-power\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Source link  therealnews.com<\/a>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"This article was originally published by Truthout on June 08, 2026. It is shared here under a \u00a0Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license. What happens to higher education when institutions dedicated to critical thought increasingly align themselves with the logics of war, surveillance, and national security? Unless we mount an organized resistance, we may viscerally experience the answer to this&hellip;","protected":false},"author":580,"featured_media":70,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_analytify_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[886,588,1147,887,567],"class_list":["post-2633","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-article","tag-education","tag-military-industrial-complex","tag-reprint","tag-war"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2633","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/580"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2633"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2633\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/70"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2633"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2633"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/wokeantifa.org\/topics\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2633"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}