The Alarming Trend: 25 out of 27 EU Countries Facing Academic Freedom Erosion
In a troubling revelation from the Academic Freedom Index (AFI) Update 2026, academic freedom has declined in 25 out of 27 European Union member states over the past decade. This erosion, measured across key dimensions like institutional autonomy and campus integrity, signals deep challenges for universities and colleges across Europe. The AFI, developed by scholars at the Global Public Policy Institute and V-Dem Institute, aggregates expert assessments from over 2,300 academics worldwide to score countries on a 0-1 scale, where 1 represents full freedom. While the EU average remains high at around 0.84 in 2025 (down from 0.93 in 2014), the steady downward trajectory threatens the continent's reputation as a bastion of open inquiry and innovation in higher education.
This decline is not uniform but pervasive, with 24 countries affected over five years and 15 in the last year alone. Only two nations—likely Croatia and Poland, based on recent upgrades in status—have bucked the trend amid political shifts. For Europe's universities, this means growing pressures on research agendas, teaching content, and campus life, potentially stifling the next generation of scholars and undermining Europe's competitive edge in global knowledge production.
Decoding the Academic Freedom Index: Key Dimensions Under Threat
The AFI evaluates five core indicators: freedom to research and teach, academic exchange and dissemination, institutional autonomy, campus integrity, and academic/cultural expression. Globally, declines have hit all, but in the EU, institutional autonomy—a measure of universities' self-governance free from undue political or economic interference—has seen notable drops in countries like Austria, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, and Switzerland. For instance, the Netherlands dropped from A to B status, with campus integrity falling sharply by 1.09 points.
Campus integrity, encompassing safety from violence or surveillance on university grounds, has eroded due to rising protests and security measures. Freedom of academic expression, vital for debate in classrooms, faces self-censorship amid polarization. These metrics directly impact higher education: restricted autonomy limits hiring and curriculum decisions, while compromised integrity disrupts daily academic life.
| Dimension | EU Countries with Significant Declines (2014-2024) | Average Change |
|---|---|---|
| Institutional Autonomy | Austria, Cyprus (-0.82), Hungary (-1.19), Netherlands (-0.59), Portugal (-1.06) | -0.5 to -1.2 |
| Campus Integrity | Netherlands (-1.09), others minor | -0.46 avg. |
| Freedom to Research/Teach | Greece (-1.05), Italy (-0.53), Germany (-0.56) | -0.4 avg. |
This table illustrates the breadth of challenges, drawn from the European Parliament's Academic Freedom Monitor 2025, underscoring how interconnected these freedoms are for thriving university ecosystems.
Spotlight on Hardest-Hit Nations: Hungary, Greece, and Portugal Lead Declines
Hungary exemplifies severe erosion, with an AFI drop of -0.26 over the decade, driven by government control over university leadership and funding. The expulsion of Central European University (CEU) in 2019 remains a landmark case, forcing the prestigious institution to relocate to Vienna amid laws targeting George Soros-linked entities. Recent audits and rector appointments continue to politicize governance at institutions like Eötvös Loránd University.
Greece saw the steepest sub-indicator declines (-0.22 overall), with freedom to research plummeting -1.05 due to political interference in sensitive topics like history and migration. University rectors have reported funding tied to ideological alignment, while campus asylum laws—once protective—now enable unchecked violence, as seen in Athens university clashes.
Portugal's comprehensive downturn (-0.21 AFI, all indicators down) stems from austerity-era funding cuts and managerialism, where university boards prioritize metrics over academic priorities. The University of Lisbon faced controversies over politically appointed administrators influencing research on climate and inequality.
Northern Europe Not Immune: Netherlands, Finland, and Germany's Subtle Shifts
Even high-scorers like the Netherlands (0.76 AFI, downgraded) grapple with right-wing budget cuts and polarization. Surveys show academics self-censoring on migration and climate to avoid backlash, with Leiden University navigating farmer protests impacting agricultural research. Finland's -0.11 decline reflects competitive funding undermining autonomy; Helsinki University researchers faced US DEI-related grant losses, closing all Confucius Institutes amid espionage fears.
Germany (-0.09 AFI) contends with AfD pressures on 'woke' topics, as at Humboldt University where gender studies courses faced defunding threats. These cases highlight how populist surges erode trust in expertise.
Photo by Arno Senoner on Unsplash
Root Causes: Political Polarization, Funding Squeeze, and External Pressures
Political interference tops the list, with governments appointing sympathetic leaders and conditioning funds on priorities. In Italy, anti-gender motions led to inspections at 121 universities, protested as autonomy violations. Commercialization pushes market-driven research, eroding public-good focus; private funders like Huawei dictate agendas in 750+ Italian ties.
Foreign interference looms large: China's Confucius Institutes (closed in Finland, concerns in Italy/Belgium) and US policies (DEI orders risking € funding). Gaza protests across EU campuses—from Antwerp to Warsaw—sparked security crackdowns, fracturing communities. Self-censorship rises: 45% Flemish academics harassed, 30% Finnish researchers online trolled.
Read the full AFI 2026 Update for detailed metrics.
Impacts on Europe's Universities: Innovation Stifled, Brains Drained
Declining autonomy hampers hiring diverse faculty and pursuing bold research, as seen in Portugal's stalled programs. Campus disruptions from protests reduce teaching time; self-censorship homogenizes curricula, limiting critical thinking for students. Innovation suffers: EU R&D lags (Italy 1.38% GDP), risking brain drain to stable systems like Singapore.
Students bear brunt: ESU notes activists persecuted for Gaza stances, undermining 'freedom to learn.' Long-term, weakened universities erode Europe's soft power and economic edge, with AFI correlating to research output.
Student Voices: Frontline Defenders Sound the Alarm
"Academic freedom is not a niche concern—it's a core pillar of democratic societies," asserts the ESU. Students decry exclusion from protections, facing persecution for activism. In Belgium, Ghent University's Gaza statement sparked backlash; Antwerp withdrew complaints but tensions linger. ESU calls for recognizing 'freedom to learn' as integral.
EU Responses and Policy Recommendations
The European Parliament's Monitor 2025 urges binding protections, regular reporting, and integration into funding like Horizon Europe. Initiatives include research security centers and due diligence for foreign ties. Universities push back: Finnish rectors condemned US censorship; Italian professors protested inspections. Yet, coordinated EU action lags. Explore the EP Monitor 2025 for in-depth analysis.
Pathways Forward: Reclaiming Academic Freedom in EU Higher Education
Solutions demand multi-stakeholder action: fortify legal safeguards (e.g., constitutional enshrinement), boost public funding decoupled from politics, foster transparency in governance, and train on resilience against interference. Universities can enhance internal codes, support at-risk staff/students via relocation schemes, and promote dialogue on polarization. Policymakers should prioritize academic freedom in EU treaties, with student inclusion key. Positive cases like Poland's reversal post-PiS show recovery possible through democratic renewal. By addressing these, Europe's universities can rebound, safeguarding inquiry for future generations.
- Strengthen EU-wide monitoring with student input.
- Decouple funding from ideological tests.
- Counter foreign influence via vetted partnerships.
- Promote campus dialogue to combat self-censorship.
- Invest in researcher protections and mobility.
Stakeholders must act swiftly; the cost of inaction is a diminished higher education landscape unable to tackle global challenges like climate change and AI ethics.




