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In this episode, we speak with Omer Bartov about academic silence, Gaza, and the costs of speaking publicly about ongoing mass violence. Bartov reflects on the pressures shaping scholarly speech in the United States, the uneven application of legal and moral frameworks, and what the world’s response to Gaza reveals about whose lives are recognized and protected. He also addresses the personal and professional consequences of speaking out, the limits of academic caution, and the need for structural reform within the academy. These themes are explored further in his forthcoming book, Israel: What Went Wrong?, with link to purchase included in the description below: https://www.penguin.co.uk/books/47784... 0:00 Introduction and Biography 01:58 Academic Silence on Gaza: Moral Stakes and Scholarly Responsibility 12:41 The Personal and Professional Costs of Speaking Out 18:06 Pressure, Self-Censorship, and Navigating Institutional Warnings 22:38 Silence, Intimidation, and Comparative Academic Climates Across Countries 28:36 Gatekeeping, Disciplinary Policing, and the Questioning of Scholarly Authority 33:09 Has the Academy Failed a Moral Test or Revealed Structural Limits? 39:41 Academic Freedom, Donor Dependency, and the Capitalist University Model 47:47 The Future of Holocaust and Genocide Studies in U.S. Higher Education 51:02 Past Silence, Present Clarity, and the Ethics of Scholarly Reckoning 56:35 Hierarchies of Grievability and the Limits of “Never Again” 58:48 Advice to Early-Career Academics Facing Ethical and Professional Risk