Do allegations of plagiarism constitute a sufficiently serious offence as to warrant the resignation as Harvard president of Claudine Gay? Or have 鈥溾 allegations been exploited in a campaign to force out a black female leader, following on from last month鈥檚 c?
Unlike fellow congressional witness Liz Magill, who was forced to resign as University of Pennsylvania president after equivocating over whether calls for Jewish genocide would breach her university鈥檚 code of conduct, Gay 鈥 who made similar statements 鈥 . But that evidently changed after were made against her, dating right back to her PhD.
The similarities between the allegations against Gay and those I have regularly encountered on academic misconduct panels are readily apparent. However, Gay made no mention of them in , insisting that 鈥渦pholding scholarly rigor鈥 was one of her 鈥渂edrock values鈥 and implying that the campaign against her was driven by 鈥渞acial animus鈥. In a follow-up , she mentioned but minimised the allegations.
Many articles, , have attributed Gay鈥檚 resignation primarily to 鈥渃ampus culture wars鈥, and many observers have gone further. Critical race theorist Ibram X. Kendi the use of 鈥渁 seemingly legitimate reason鈥 for 鈥渁 racist mob鈥 to attack 鈥渁 Black person鈥.
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Harvard has , emphasising that students must endeavour to distinguish their own ideas and findings from those derived from other sources and use appropriation indications for quotations and referencing, including for paraphrased material. These are relatively standard across the humanities and social sciences (even if may be less fastidious about direct quotations and ), and it would be absurd if academics 鈥 including university presidents 鈥 were not held to the same standards as students.
The internet has significantly increased the possibilities for plagiarism, and the advent of contract cheating and AI only further exacerbates the problem. Yet how often are plagiarism policies reinforced? Do most journal and book editors regularly run submissions through plagiarism checks or interrogate them by other means (especially relating to ideas and knowledge, rather than just literal text)? It can be difficult to find people willing to commit time to peer review (which is, at best, poorly paid), and it can be unrealistic for a reviewer to spend more than a few hours on a paper. Similarly, exam markers, who sometimes have no more than 30 minutes to assess a 2,000-plus-word essay,聽might be unable to conduct scrupulous checks beyond what software such as Turnitin can provide.
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Nor is time the only factor informing the policing of referencing standards.聽Responding to a Conservative activist鈥檚 likening of Gay鈥檚 resignation to a scalping, a candidate for Mayor of Denver聽. 鈥淯sing violent trophy imagery against a Black woman tells you this was never about plagiarism but reestablishing white supremacy in academia,鈥 she tweeted.聽And social media is currently full of claims that plagiarism is a Western construct or even a tool of white supremacy. Some of this is just a knee-jerk response to a bitter case, but I anticipate hearing such arguments regularly recur.
They reflect a recognition that attitudes towards plagiarism differ across the globe. found much greater incidence or acceptance of plagiarism in Eastern Europe, Asia (especially China) and Africa (where there can be limited awareness of the concept) than in Western Europe and the US. Even in France that the need to avoid plagiarism is not emphasised in teaching, and the practice can even sometimes be encouraged.
It would not be difficult to and academic misconduct practically out of existence on the grounds that stringently enforcing existing standards amounts to an imposition of Western values. But this would make into a cultural phenomenon what could just as plausibly be seen as a clash between the values of democratic and authoritarian societies.
, Catherine Owen, an ethnographer of Eurasian governance processes, has argued that taking a 鈥渄ecolonial鈥 approach to academic standards risks relegating scholarship below government-mandated agendas of social harmony and economic development, such as are found in China, narrowing the space for pluralist global knowledge production.
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It is true that fetishising certain types of 鈥渙riginality鈥 (as promoted by the , for instance) can privilege iconoclastic rather than integrative work. It is also true that critical and other skills can be very limited if not . But an emphasis on avoiding plagiarism and undertaking critical thinking serves as a corrective to academic cultures based upon rote learning, imitation and deference. It liberates students and academics to explore beyond existing orthodoxies.
And while those students and academics聽might not always welcome the responsibility to construct their own arguments and conclusions, requiring them to demonstrably do so, through proper citation practice, is surely preferable to pandering to academic cultures where the simplest and safest approach is simply to ape the work of those with power.
Whatever the rights and wrongs of Gay鈥檚 own behaviour and treatment, enhancing everyone鈥檚 ability to think for themselves about such issues is surely a primary task of higher education.
Ian Pace is professor of music, culture and society and university adviser 鈥 interdisciplinarity at City, University of London, and a co-founder of City Academics for Academic Freedom and the London Universities鈥 Council for Academic Freedom. He is writing here in a personal capacity.
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