An academic was banned from quoting from a company document in any research that he published or disseminated through his university because the institution feared legal action.
Joseph Hanlon, a senior lecturer in development policy and practice at The Open University, said that the institution had shown āno interest in defending academic freedomā and had ācaved inā to lawyers acting for an international agribusiness firm.
The restrictions imposed by The Open University meant that in one instance, academics at the institution were unable to send hyperlinks to a paper that Dr Hanlon had delivered at a World Bank conference that quoted from the report.
In early 2011 Dr Hanlon, an expert on Mozambique, used his Open University personal web page to post a report by Quifel Natural Resources, a Portuguese agricultural company, that he had obtained. The document outlined an āagri-business investment opportunityā in the country.
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At the request of Quifelās agents, Dr Hanlon removed the report but replaced it with a summary that challenged the amount of land the company claimed to own in Mozambique.
Then in June 2011, Dr Hanlon received a letter from solicitors acting for DragonKnight Advisors, a financial advisory firm that represents Quifel, alleging that he had breached confidentiality laws by using the report. It ordered him to write an undertaking never to publish the report or information from it in the future.
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Lawyers for the National Union of Journalists, of which Dr Hanlon is a member, challenged the solicitorsā arguments. When they did not hear back, they considered the case closed.
However, solicitors for Dragon-Knight Advisors had also made similar complaints about breach of confidence and demands to The Open University the previous month.
Following legal correspondence between the university and DragonKnight, Dr Hanlon was forbidden by the university from quoting extracts of the report via any university website or email address.
He was also banned from including hyperlinks to the report in any Open University publication and from distributing any such links from a university email address.
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āThereās a very real risk here that if it becomes known how easily [the university] will cave inā¦itās going to create problems for all Open University researchers because all it will take is a letter,ā Dr Hanlon said.
Dr Hanlon presented a paper at a World Bank conference in April 2012 in which he quoted from the Quifel report. But because of The Open Universityās restrictions, he was able to list on the paper only his affiliations to the London School of Economics and the University of Manchester.
Anne De Roeck, dean of The Open Universityās Faculty of Maths, Computing and Technology, said that Dr Hanlon had āused a confidential document as a source in his research, and The Open University cannot publish commercially confidential documents on its website without permission from the ownerā.
However, she said the university was ānot preventing Dr Hanlon to quote from it, and cite it, in his academic workā.
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Neither DragonKnight Advisors nor Quifel responded to 51³Ō¹Ļās request for comment.
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