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Middle East studies in the NewsAn Open Letter on the Controversy at Columbia
History News Network http://hnn.us/roundup/entries/10725.html http://www.campus-watch.org/article/id/1746 The following statement is circulating at Columbia University. It was forwarded to HNN on 3-9-05. During the past several months, Columbia University has been subjected to an extraordinary series of attacks impugning its reputation as a center of learning that welcomes students and scholars with a diverse range of points of view and similarly diverse backgrounds, loyalties, and commitments. Many of the allegations that have been made during this campaign--allegations that have attempted to create the impression that an atmosphere of intolerance exists at Columbia--are blatantly false. In many ways, they betray a failure to understand the mission and character of research universities and their contributions to modern life. Columbia, like a number of its peer institutions, is a great center of teaching, inquiry, and research. Its primary missions are to transmit knowledge and to generate new knowledge. Thriving research universities in the United States have contributed immensely to the national welfare in areas that range from scientific advances to improvements in our historical understanding to discoveries that have led to numerous inventions of importance to people in all walks of life. Universities will continue to make important contributions only insofar as they allow faculty and students to explore and develop their ideas freely and to expose those ideas to robust and uninhibited debate in an atmosphere of civility both inside and outside the classroom. Some of these ideas-including some of the best among them--will be unwelcome, unsettling, or offensive to many people when they are first articulated. That is as it should be. Universities contribute to American life primarily because they foster innovative ideas, and innovation is by nature unsettling. No one associated with the Columbia community-including students, faculty, and others-should have reason to fear reprisals or sanctions of any kind for expressing unorthodox or unpopular views of any political stripe. Universities have a responsibility for ensuring that teaching and inquiry under their auspices are conducted in an atmosphere that is characterized by civility and freedom from intimidation, physical assault, or violations of rights. Within the context of a university, however, neither faculty nor students have a right to be shielded from disagreeable or unfamiliar ideas, the production of which is integral to the mission of the university. We urge all those who take note of or have taken part in the current outside campaign, which aims to pressure Columbia into censorship of its own faculty, to remember that a commitment to freedom of thought and speech is fundamental to the modern university. Lila Abu-Lughod, Anthropology Charles Armstrong, History Helen Benedict, Journalism Elizabeth Blackmar, History Douglas Chalmers, Political Science Partha Chatterjee, Anthropology Lewis Cole, Film John Collins, Philosophy Victoria de Grazia, History Jon Elster, Political Science Joan Ferrante, English Barbara Fields, History Eric Foner, History Eugene Galanter, Psychology Herbert J. Gans, Sociology Lynn Garafola, Dance Todd Gitlin, Journalism Robert Hanning, English William V. Harris, History Andreas Huyssen, German Robert Jervis, Political Science David C. Johnston, Political Science Mark Kesselman, Political Science Alice Kessler-Harris, History Philip Kitcher, Philosophy David H. Krantz, Psychology Edward Mendelson, English Christia Mercer, Philosophy Brinkley Messick, Anthropology Rosalind Morris, Anthropology Keith Moxey, Art History Andrew J. Nathan, Political Science Fred Neuhouser, Philosophy Gary Y. Okihiro, Ethnic Studies Thomas Pogge, Philosophy Wayne Proudfoot, Religion David Rosner, History James Schamus, Film Eliott Sclar, Architecture Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, English Anders Stephanson, History Michael Thaddeus, Mathematics Charles Tilly, Sociology Gwendolyn Wright, Architecture Note: Articles listed under "Middle East studies in the News" provide information on current developments concerning Middle East studies on North American campuses. These reports do not necessarily reflect the views of Campus Watch and do not necessarily correspond to Campus Watch's critique.receive the latest by email: subscribe to campus watch's free mailing list
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