Legislators in Wyoming are hoping that when it comes to banning gender studies, the third timeโ€™s the charm.

The legislature is attempting once again to defund gender studies departments at the University of Wyoming. The budget amendment was adopted by the Senate and failed to pass the House; it could still become law via the budget reconciliation process. A separate budget amendment, which passed the Senate, would also ban most DEI initiatives at UW.

The gender studies ban would prohibit state or federal funds for gender studies majors, minors, courses, or even extracurricular activities. According to the sponsor, the intent of the amendment is to prohibit universities from funding something that is โ€œmore of an ideology than a program.โ€

โ€œThe world needs more cowboys,โ€ said another senator. โ€œThe world does not need more social justice warriors.โ€ Ideological meddling in higher education, then, is acceptable to the billโ€™s supporters โ€“ so long as it reflects a certain viewpoint.

It is hard to imagine a more severe violation of academic freedom than for the legislature to ban an entire field of academic inquiry that they donโ€™t like. In allowing the state to โ€œmicromanageโ€ the affairs of the university, in the words of a senator who opposed the bill, Wyomingโ€™s proposal parallels Floridaโ€™s effort to restrict access to sociology on public campuses and attempt to severely limit the scope of teacher preparation programs.

The attack on gender studies specifically echoes a move at the New College of Florida to dissolve the schoolโ€™s gender studies program for openly ideological reasons, which PEN America previously compared to Viktor Orbรกnโ€™s prohibition on gender studies in Hungary in 2018. And like in Hungary, the bans may be a signal that broader ideological attacks are on the horizon.