American Universities Reject British Boycott

From Phi Beta Cons:

American college and university presidents do something right

They signed a statement published in newspapers today chastising their British colleagues’ targeting of Israeli colleges and universities.

O’Brien links to an article in The Michigan Daily, “Colleges protest boycott with newspaper ad” -

University President Mary Sue Coleman and former University presidents Lee Bollinger and Harold Shapiro, along with presidents of other American colleges, endorsed an advertisement that appeared in the New York Times on Aug. 8 that argued against the United Kingdom’s University and College Union’s proposed boycott of Israeli universities.

The UCU, which has about 120,000 members, passed a resolution 158 to 99 in May that supported a boycott of Israeli universities. Some union members who are unhappy with Israel’s policies concerning relations with Palestine advocated the resolution.

Bollinger, who is now president of Columbia University, criticized the UCU’s decision in a statement entitled, “Boycott Israeli Universities? Boycott Ours, Too!” that was featured in the full-page advertisement. The advertisement listed about 300 names of presidents of higher education institutions who support Bollinger’s statement.

Robert Hornsby, Columbia’s director of media relations, said in an e-mail that Bollinger originally issued the statement featured in the advertisement on June 12.

In his statement, Bollinger challenged the UCU to consider the effect a boycott would have on colleges.

“If the British UCU is intent on pursuing its deeply misguided policy, then it should add Columbia to its boycott list, for we do not intend to draw distinctions between our mission and that of the universities you are seeking to punish,” Bollinger’s statement said.

Coleman first made public her position on the issue in July when she published a statement similar to Bollinger’s on the University website.

“At the University of Michigan, we have many valued connections with colleagues in Israel, and I for one am prepared to stand in solidarity with Israeli academics in the face of a boycott, should it come to pass,” Coleman’s statement said. “It is in the nature of academic boycotts directly to impede academic freedom and the intellectual discourse that are at the heart of our mission in higher education.”

Several prominent universities’ names did not appear in the advertisement, including Harvard University, Yale University and the University of Chicago.

University of Chicago spokeswoman Julie Peterson said in an e-mail that University of Chicago President Robert Zimmer sent his own letter to Sally Hunt, the general secretary of the UCU, on July 31.

“President Zimmer believed he could be most effective by articulating his position directly to the UCU,” Peterson said.

Representatives from Harvard and Yale could not be reached for comment.

Coleman’s statement said that the Association of American Universities, a group of 62 research universities in the U.S. and Canada to which the University of Michigan belongs, also opposes the boycott.

It’s about time.  I wrote about the UK boycott about 3 months ago and it appears that the vast majority of American universities have finally come out on the right side.  Better late than never, I suppose.

 

Interesting tidbit:  although Harvard and Yale have not released statements regarding the boycott, they are members of the Association of American Universities mentioned by Coleman, as are Cornell, Brown, UPenn, Columbia, and many other prestigious institutions.  The full list is here.  Doesn’t this imply that all of these universities are opposed to the boycott?  One can hope.  I can’t seem to find information on the AAU website confirming Coleman’s statement.

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4 Responses to “American Universities Reject British Boycott”


  1. 1 wytammic

    Doesn’t this imply that all of these universities are opposed to the boycott?

    Let’s hope so!!

  2. 2 Kevin

    If even Columbia is opposing it, then this is a very good sign indeed. Columbia University is the hippiest of hippie that hippieland has to offer. My friend’s Dad is a professor there (well, Barnard College, actually), and if you put him next to a Grateful Dead type hippie, the GD guy would appear to be wearing a suit and tie in comparison to the ultra-hippieness that is a Columbia professor.

    My point is really just that if uber-liberal Columbia won’t bow to this racist boycott, no college in America will. But any chance to disparage a hippie… I’m taking it.

    Hehe, I feel like Bucky Katt now :)

    Interesting side story… to me anyway. My best-friend did end up going to Columbia, and stayed liberal as heck the whole time he was there. But then he went for an MBA at Cornell, and came back a conservative! He still spouts the liberal rhetoric, but you can tell he no longer believes it. He HATES it when I mention to him that Cornell fixed him, so guess what I do often?:)

    Hah. Sorry for running on so long.

  3. 3 Tammi

    Just testing to see if comments are working better. :)

  4. 4 tieki rae

    Kevin - I completely agree that it is a good sign Columbia is rejecting the boycott. Actually, I think the author of a super ridiculous, pro-Palestinian book that I had to read last year is a professor there. By the way, anytime you reference Bucky Katt and Cornell being conservative in one comment, you automatically get kudos from me. :) In my heart, Cornell will always be the “fair and balanced”, “50% Republican, 50% Democrat” institution presented to me by the admissions staff. Oh, ignorance truly is bliss. Although, in all fairness to the endangered species that is Cornell conservatism, the business school and econ department are pretty conservative… not bad, 2 out of a billion departments…

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