According to the Danish University Act, both institutional and individual academic freedom are protected at Danish universities. In 2017, Denmark ranked 24th out of the 28 EU countries in academic freedom. In a 2024 study, it ranked 32nd out of 179 countries. According to the union DM, researchers have raised concerns about political criticism or interference in work deemed controversial or politically inconvenient.
Precarious employment and limited job security can undermine independence and research quality, especially for early-career scholars. Growing competition for external funding and pressures to demonstrate relevance, innovation and collaboration may constrain the pursuit of basic or curiosity-driven research. In addition, limited awareness and dialogue about academic freedom in the Danish public contributes to its vulnerability. In 2021, a political campaign in Denmark targeted what critics called “pseudo-research and activism,” culminating in parliamentary resolution V137 on “excessive activism in certain research environments.” Although the resolution introduced no concrete measures, it warned universities to ensure strict academic self-regulation, and some conservative politicians went so far as to demand ministerial intervention, lists of “dangerous” study programs, and even the closure of specific research environments. Over 3,000 academics signed a petition in
Politiken arguing that the resolution constituted an attack on academic freedom and would encourage
self-censorship. They also warned that social media had become a venue for intimidation and
harassment of researchers during the controversy. Already in 1986, the Danish state decided to close the education in Sociology at
Copenhagen University, on the grounds that the institute "existed in its own self-referential world, produced few publications in international journals, and failed to reflect the pluralism the discipline had to offer". This governmental intervention into what should be taught at universities, and what should not, is controversial to this date. In 2025,
Morten Messerschmidt, leader of the
Danish People's Party (DF), proposed closing
Roskilde University, due to it being "woke" and a "political institution". Danish Politicians from the DF and
Liberal Alliance had threatened the university with closure already in 2023. ==See also==