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Campus Watch Celebrates Its Fifth Anniversaryby Cinnamon Stillwell
In April of this year, I began working as the Northern California Representative for Campus Watch, which, as many of our readers know, is a project of the Philadelphia-based think tank, the Middle East Forum. Despite the hysterical claims of "censorship" and "threats to academic freedom" emanating from Middle East studies academics in the spotlight, Campus Watch's purpose, as made clear in our Mission Statement, is to review and critique Middle East studies in North America with an aim to improving them. My goal, as Northern California Representative, is to call further attention to Middle East studies academics in West Coast colleges and universities, a problematic lot if there ever was one (my archives can be found here and here). But for those ensconced in their ivory towers and unused to withstanding scrutiny of any kind, Campus Watch constitutes a threat to be resisted at all costs. This paranoia has led to numerous smears against Campus Watch and, in some cases, outright falsehoods, a pattern that Campus Watch director Winfield Myers has devoted much time here at our weblog recently to correcting (read more here, here, here, and here). Middle East Forum founder and director Daniel Pipes marks Campus Watch's fifth anniversary this week with an article titled, "Five Years of Campus Watch," in which he elaborates on this theme: What has Campus Watch, a project to critique and improve Middle East studies in the United States and Canada, achieved since it opened its doors this week in 2002? Continue reading "Five Years of Campus Watch."
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© 2002 - 2008 The Middle East Forum. Campus Watch contact e-mail: campus-watch@meforum.org |
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