By surrendering to a political mob despite the apparent protection of the world鈥檚 most powerful university, Claudine Gay has set a precedent that has left academics wondering who else can possibly survive the US鈥 rising ideological crusades.
Professor Gay聽stepped down聽as president of Harvard University after six months of stifling pressure from an alignment of conservative forces, largely navigating the howls of pro-Israel activists, only to succumb to borderline complaints about poor editing in her past scholarly writings.
It amounts to a politically based toppling of the leader of the nation鈥檚 most prestigious and well-endowed university, several academics said, with ominous implications for anyone else in academia who dares to persistently challenge the interests of US political and economic wealth.
鈥淭his is the most prominent scalp,鈥 said Dov Waxman, professor of political science at the University of California, Los Angeles, and director of its Y&S Nazarian Centre for Israel Studies. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I think this is going to really embolden those who want to continue this.鈥
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The ultimate success of the plagiarism complaints as the apparently determinative weapon against Professor Gay, he and other academics warned, was especially worrying, since it is an allegation that is becoming very聽easy to raise with the help of advanced computer tools and often very difficult to adjudicate in a fair and consistent manner.
鈥淰ery few of us can probably hold up to that kind of scrutiny,鈥 said Jennifer Ruth, professor of film studies at Portland State University who writes on issues of academic freedom through the American Association of University Professors. 鈥淏y giving in, Harvard has only set the stage for continuing the expansion of this kind of scare and chilling of academic freedom and targeting of higher ed.鈥
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The endgame for Professor Gay began a month earlier, when she and the heads of two other elite US universities 鈥 all women relatively new to their presidencies 鈥 agreed to appear before Congress to answer Republican allegations that student protests against Israeli military attacks on Palestinian civilians amounted to campus tolerance of antisemitism. That聽moment of political theatre聽鈥 combined with sustained criticism from wealthy individual donors 鈥 soon led one of the presidents, Elizabeth Magill of the University of Pennsylvania,听to step down.
Professor Gay appeared to have survived the moment, backed by hundreds of faculty demanding that she stay. But she then became consumed by a parallel campaign by conservative activists compiling a list of more than 40 instances 鈥 typically brief excerpts of a few sentences or less 鈥 that they put forth as evidence that her scholarly record was marred by repeatedly citing others without proper credit.
Professor Gay 鈥 the first black president of the nation鈥檚 oldest and most prestigious university 鈥 said she had resigned 鈥渋n the best interests of Harvard鈥 to let the institution move forward. In a聽听蹿辞谤听The New York Times, she described a brief presidency filled with constant attacks including death threats, and urged her academic colleagues nationwide not to succumb to 鈥渢he loudest and most extreme voices in our culture鈥.
She acknowledged that her critics were able to find 鈥渋nstances in my academic writings where some material duplicated other scholars鈥 language, without proper attribution鈥, but said she immediately corrected such 鈥渆rrors鈥, and 鈥渘ever misrepresented my research findings, nor have I ever claimed credit for the research of others鈥.
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Academia has long struggled with evaluating what kinds of duplications or apparent duplications in writing deserve what kind of sanction, said Duff Wrobbel, professor of applied communication studies at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. SIU was home to a 2007 case that led it and numerous US institutions to make more nuanced assessments of the matter, involving a former Democratic congressman, Glenn Poshard, who was obliged by a faculty senate vote to step down as president of the SIU system because of unattributed material in his doctoral dissertation, then allowed to stay after further investigation called it 鈥渋nadvertent plagiarism鈥.
Professor Wrobbel said it was usually straightforward to see if a writer intended to be deceitful about sources, and that many scholarly articles contain similar chunks of phrasing because academics 鈥 for good reason 鈥 share common concepts and a common set of language.
鈥淭here鈥檚 only so many ways to say something,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd any time you change a word, you muddy it up, and academics are trained to not do that.鈥
Yet there was little evidence, said Professor Ruth, that Professor Gay鈥檚 critics were interested in that kind of attentive analysis. Even聽her chief critic in the congressional hearing, Elise Stefanik, was accused by a Democratic colleague of copying large portions of a letter she sent to the Harvard, Penn and Massachusetts Institute of Technology presidents after the hearing demanding their resignations. Ms Stefanik聽聽as 鈥渟omething that happens every day on Capitol Hill鈥.
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Such instances of apparent hypocrisy from Professor Gay鈥檚 antagonists appear to have no effect on critics of higher education, Professor Ruth said, because ideologues聽have a long list聽of supporters聽willing to back them聽regardless.
鈥淚t鈥檚 total scare,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t is part of the rise of fascism.鈥
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