Academic Integrity Travestied at Columbia Middle East Studies Conference

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Terri Ginsberg | Zmag | 14 March 2005 On Sunday, March 6, Columbia University hosted a conference called “The Middle East and Academic Integrity on the American Campus.” Despite its repeated and advertised calls for “balance” and “objectivity” in academic scholarship, the gathering exemplified nothing of academic integrity. The conference was sponsored by U.S.

» Read more

Faculty Revolt Is Brewing at Columbia

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) JACOB GERSHMAN | The New York Sun | 24 March 2005 A faculty rebellion is brewing at Columbia University against President Lee Bollinger over his handling of the university’s investigation into the conduct of professors in the Middle East studies department. Leading the way is a former provost of the university, Jonathan Cole, who

» Read more

University Senate Meets, Responds to MEALAC Debate

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Lisa Hirschmann | Columbia Spectator | 28 February 2005 The University Senate returned to its discussion of improving Columbia’s grievance procedures on Friday in response to the ongoing MEALAC controversy, but it began with President Bollinger’s first public criticism of the New York City Department of Education’s recent dismissal of Rashid Khalidi from a

» Read more

Columbia U. Professor, Criticized for Views on Israel, Is Banned From Teacher Training

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) BROCK READ | Chronicle of Higher Education | 4 March 2005 The New York City Department of Education will prohibit a professor of Arab studies at Columbia University from appearing in an occasional training program for secondary-school teachers, citing the professor’s criticism of Israel. Rashid Khalidi, director of Columbia’s Middle East Institute, had spoken

» Read more

Dismantling the Politics of Comfort

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) The Satya Interview with Ward Churchill | Satya Magazine | April 2004 Ward Churchill is perhaps one of the most provocative thinkers around. A Creek and enrolled Keetoowah Band Cherokee, Churchill is a longtime Native rights activist. He has been heavily involved in the American Indian Movement and the Leonard Peltier Defense Committee. He

» Read more

The Prefigurative Politics of Volunteer Subtitling in the Egyptian Revolution

Professor Martha Cheung Memorial Lecture, May 2014, Hong Kong Baptist University Mona Baker, Centre for Translation & Intercultural Studies, University of Manchester The idea of prefiguration originally derived from anarchist discourse; it involves experimenting with currently available means in such a way that they come to mirror or actualize the political ideals that inform a movement, thus collapsing the traditional distinction

» Read more

Realities and Roots of Pro-Israeli Harassment at Columbia University

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Mark Roberts and M. Junaid Alam | Znet Magazine | 16 April 2005 Introduction by M. Junaid Alam Readers who have been following the attacks on Arab professors at Columbia University may have read my recent investigative article on the subject. The piece elicited many positive responses, including from Columbia staff and students. One

» Read more
1 108 109 110 111 112 154