Israeli Academic Extremism
Emmanuel Navon accuses
Leftist Israeli Academia of "Scorn and Arrogance"; Rectors of BGU
and TAU stoop to heckling at Knesset hearing
Instead of
addressing the issues raised by the IZS and by Im Tirtzu, the
academic establishment has reacted with scorn and arrogance. At the
Knesset hearing, Ben-Gurion University rector Zvi Hacohen
interrupted IZS's presentation, calling it "nonsense" and claiming
(without proof) that its paper did not meet the most basic criteria
of academic research. Tel Aviv University rector Aharon Shai also
claimed IZS's paper was not a research paper (without explaining
why) and added that adopting an academic code of ethics (as proposed
by Sa'ar at the beginning of the hearing) would "destroy Israeli
academia."
... TWO DAYS after
the Knesset hearing, Haaretz came out in defense of the universities
by claiming that adopting a code of ethics would harm academic
freedom. It wrote that Sa'ar proposed such a code as a result of the
lobbying of Im Tirtzu. But the idea of a code was first proposed by
Prof. Amnon Rubinstein, a renowned academic with impeccable liberal
credentials. Moreover, BGU has such a code (the only local
university to have one).
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Op-EdContributors/Article.aspx?id=195472
Mount Scopus or
Mount Olympus?
A code of ethics would clearly define what does and does not
constitute academic freedom of expression.
By EMMANUEL NAVON
11/15/2010
On November 2, the
Knesset Education Committee hosted a special hearing – "The
Exclusion of Zionistic Positions in Academia." The event was chaired
by MK Zevulun Orlev and attended by Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar,
MKs from various political parties, high-ranking representatives of
the universities, NGOs and ordinary citizens.
Two NGOs, the
Institute for Zionist Strategies (IZS) and Im Tirtzu, were asked to
present the main conclusions of their study on what they claim to be
the increasingly post-Zionistic narratives of the country's
political science and sociology departments. In October, IZS
published a 122- page document called "Post-Zionism in Academia." Im
Tirtzu published in May a 64-page document called "Anti-Zionistic
Incitement and Bias in Universities."
Both publications
include an extensive review of syllabi, and both reach the
conclusion that students are mostly taught a onesided and derogatory
description of nationalism in general and Zionism in particular. Im
Tirtzu's report also includes testimonies of students about what
they claim to be the one-sidedness and political intolerance of
their professors, as well as a review of the political petitions
signed by Israeli academics.
Instead of
addressing the issues raised by the IZS and by Im Tirtzu, the
academic establishment has reacted with scorn and arrogance. At the
Knesset hearing, Ben-Gurion University rector Zvi Hacohen
interrupted IZS's presentation, calling it "nonsense" and claiming
(without proof) that its paper did not meet the most basic criteria
of academic research. Tel Aviv University rector Aharon Shai also
claimed IZS's paper was not a research paper (without explaining
why) and added that adopting an academic code of ethics (as proposed
by Sa'ar at the beginning of the hearing) would "destroy Israeli
academia."
MKs were divided.
Meretz's Haim Oron and Nitzan Horowitz claimed that the alleged
political bias of political science departments should be discussed
in the Council for Higher Education (CHE) and not in the Knesset. To
which Kadima MK Ronit Tirosh replied that expecting the CHE to
discuss the issue was naïve at best and hypocritical at worst: Since
it is mostly composed of university professors, it automatically
circles the wagons around its peers. Tirosh, of course, could have
added that, as the body that represents taxpaying citizens, the
Knesset is entitled to check if that tax money is used to pay the
salaries of professors who call for an international boycott of
Israel.
TWO DAYS after the
Knesset hearing, Haaretz came out in defense of the
universities by claiming that adopting a code of ethics would harm
academic freedom. It wrote that Sa'ar proposed such a code as a
result of the lobbying of Im Tirtzu. But the idea of a code was
first proposed by Prof. Amnon Rubinstein, a renowned academic with
impeccable liberal credentials. Moreover, BGU has such a code (the
only local university to have one). Did BGU adopt its code to
"destroy Israeli academia?"
Rubinstein advocates
the adoption of a code of ethics in his article "Academic Freedom of
Expression" to be published this month in the Interdisciplinary
Center's journal Law and Business (a draft of the article is
posted on his personal website). The article addresses the question
as to whether calls from certain Israeli academics to boycott Israel
are part of freedom of expression.
He argues that
professors enjoy a special status because their students have to
listen to them and take their exams to succeed (certainly for
mandatory classes). So professors have obligations precisely because
they have privileges. Rubinstein is of the opinion that there is no
appropriate legal mechanism in Israel to ensure that professors do
not abuse their freedom of expression and respect the obligations
that stem from their privileges.
Thus he recommends
the adoption of a code to clearly define what does and does not
constitute academic freedom of expression. In the US, such a code
was adopted in 1940 by the American Association of University
Professors (AAUP) and it has been revised and updated. The code
states that professors "should at all times be accurate, should
exercise appropriate restraint, should show respect for the opinions
of others."
Those here who
oppose the adoption of a code would do a service to the public
debate by presenting sound arguments instead of claiming it would
"destroy Israeli academia" or that Sa'ar is a pawn of Im Tirtzu.
Until they do, one will have reason to assume that they have a
problem with accuracy, restraint,and respect for the opinions of
others.
The writer is a
lecturer at Tel Aviv University's Abba Eban Graduate Program for
Diplomacy Studies and a senior fellow at the Center for
International Communication, Bar-Ilan University.a
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