Blogware

Powered by TypePad

Notices

© Copyright 2007 by Law Professor Blogs, LLC. All rights reserved.

« A good word for Israeli academics | Main | In case you missed it, a column to die for.... »

October 9, 2007

More on Academic Freedom: Does It Apply to Administrators?

Or what about poor old Larry Summers?

The University of California took heat last month when it “disinvited” Harvard’s former president, Lawrence H. Summers, to speak at the university. Many in academe cried censorship. Now two faculty members — John Cary Sims, a professor of law at the University of the Pacific’s McGeorge School of Law, in Sacramento, and Deb Niemeier, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at the University of California at Davis — are responding.

“This controversy has nothing to do with academic freedom,” they write on The Sacramento Bee’s Web site. Summers, they say, was invited to speak by a member of the Board of Regents at a private dinner party, where faculty members had no chance for input. After the regents heard from university critics, they withdrew what was simply a private invitation.

“Sophistry,” says the critic Stanley Kurtz at the National Review’s online corner. “Depriving Summers of a podium because he once tentatively raised one partial, possible explanation for male/female differences in academic hiring sends a chilling message to the entire country about forbidden topics of debate on America’s college campuses.”

Last month, the American Association of University Professors seemed to agree when it criticized the university for canceling the lecture.Chronicle Blog

October 9, 2007 | Permalink

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/89778/22316354

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference More on Academic Freedom: Does It Apply to Administrators?:

Comments

Post a comment