You Do Not Mess With Academic Freedom On a March evening in 2025, Mahmoud Khalil was walking home from dinner with his wife in New York when plainclothes agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement took him into custody. Khalil, a Palestinian activist and a recent graduate student at Columbia University, held a green card. He had helped lead campus protests against Israel's military assault on Gaza, and for this the Trump administration sought to deport him, invoking the foreign policy provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act. He spent more than one hundred days in detention. He is free now, though still fighting removal, and he has gone on the offensive in the courts, filing suit under the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 against Trump officials and against private organisations, the Heritage Foundation, Canary Mission, and Betar among them, alleging a coordinated campaign to punish him for his advocacy. Sit with the details of that evening. A man returns from dinner with ...
The Margins Review · Culture-Centered Approach
The culture-centred blog of Mohan J. Dutta — Massey University, Aotearoa. Home of The Margins Review: critical intellectual opinions from Aotearoa to the world.