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Abstract

In the context of the increasing nationwide repression of free speech and academic freedom, this article emerges from the collective scholarly and activist commitments of three women of color feminist faculty teaching at a large public university. Amidst our participation in anti-genocide organizing, we have been targeted by our university’s administration for our critiques of settler-colonial and genocidal violence in Palestine. Our intervention foregrounds an anti-war feminist ethic that insists on integrity and justice in confronting the university administration’s power to discipline faculty dissent, as well as our support for students’ political activism. Within this repressive context, we articulate a “feminist ethics of integrity and justice” as a radical, transnational feminist of color praxis that exposes the injuries produced by the neoliberal university’s complicity in genocidal violence and envisions possibilities for institutional accountability and ongoing resistance.

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