JavaScript is Disabled
Your browser's JavaScript functionality is disabled. It has to be enabled to use this function of ConfTool. Here you can find information on how to enable JavaScript If you have any problems, please contact the organizers at sem@iu.edu .
Conference Agenda
The Online Program of events for the SEM 2025 Annual Meeting appears below. This program is subject to change. The final program will be published in early October.
Use the search bar to search by name or title of paper/session. Note that this search bar does not search by keyword.
Click on the session name for a detailed view (with participant names and abstracts).
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 18th Oct 2025, 04:43:37pm EDT
05A: Academic Freedom Roundtable
Time:
Friday, 24/Oct/2025:
8:30am - 10:30am
Location: M-301 Marquis Level
Sponsored by the SEM Board
This discussion centers on how academic institutions, including universities, museums, and public organizations, can work together to respond to increasing threats to academic freedom, which are becoming more widespread globally. As anti-intellectualism rises, research- and education- focused institutions face escalating pressures through attacks on funding, accreditation, research resources, and nonprofit status. The conversation explores how scholars, particularly in fields like ethnomusicology, can collaborate across organizations and disciplines to protect intellectual freedom, and how institutions can learn from each other’s strengths and vulnerabilities in the face of these challenges. What is the role of SEM in a moment like the present? How can SEM members internationally work together to bolster intellectual freedom, and explore strategies for collaboration and mutual support, rather than competing for increasingly limited resources? What creative ways can we use to speak to public audiences directly? We invite panelists and participants to think expansively about preserving access to higher education, and the protection of public trust in research, even amid financial and political pressures.