The law was proposed amid the arrest of several academics, who were arrested for signing a peace petition against the current military operation in Turkey's southeast. The academics were detained on charges of "terrorist propaganda."
Under the proposed law, faculty could be dismissed for such charges as "supporting terrorism," "participation in the strikes and demonstrations that impede the learning process," and "slandering the reputation of the state."
"These first arrests are likely to be the tip of the iceberg. The next weeks could see a wave of them in jail," Gareth Jenkins, a political analyst based in Istanbul told Nature.
The law would also target the arrested professors' supporters, as their actions, by definition are "behavior which smears the state's reputation" in the new law.
Under current law, the professors cannot be dismissed, because such charges are not part of the law. One of the more contentious issues is that faculty could be fired for "participation in the activities of political parties, which go beyond the provisions stipulated by the law."