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Debating Party Parity in Faculty Population
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| Panel on politics:
from left,
Lange, Van Alstyne, Munger, Schlesinger, Adcock,
and Davidson |
| Photo:
JIm Wallace |
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Controversy erupted after the Duke Conservative
Union (DCU) published a full-page "open letter" to Duke
President Nannerl O. Keohane as a paid advertisement in The Chronicle
on February 9. The advertisement reported a disparity in the political
affiliations of university administrators and faculty members,
offering a breakdown of the number of Democrats and Republicans
who teach in each department. An overwhelming number of faculty
members are Democrats, according to the group, and this, the DCU
argued, was evidence of Duke's lack of intellectual diversity.
A Chronicle story on the advertisement quoted John Burness, senior
vice president for public affairs and government relations, who
said that political affiliation is never used as a "litmus
test" for potential professors. But Michael Munger, chair
of the political science department, said, "In at least one
case, a department chair has said they thought the function of
Duke was to rid conservative students of their hypocrisies... If
that attitude were widespread, then yes, we would need to hire
more conservatives." Munger went on to say he felt the problem
was not widespread.
Robert Brandon, chair of the philosophy department, told The Chronicle
that "we try to hire the best, smartest people available....
If, as John Stuart Mill said, stupid people are generally conservative,
then there are lots of conservatives we will never hire. Mill's
analysis may go some way towards explaining the power of the Republican
party in our society and the relative scarcity of Republicans in
academia. Players in the NBA tend to be taller than average. There
is a good reason for this. Members of academia tend to be a bit
smarter than average. There is a good reason for this, too."
Response to Brandon's comments came swiftly, including a Chronicle
letter from a Duke parent, claiming Brandon misinterpreted what
Mill was actually saying. After what Brandon called "two days
of venomous, hate-filled e-mails from self-described 'conservatives,' " he
wrote a follow-up column in The Chronicle, clarifying his comments. "I
did not say that all conservatives are stupid, nor even that most
conservatives are stupid," he wrote. "I will go on the
record as saying that some conservatives are stupid, but so are
some liberals; there is plenty of stupidity to go around. The serious
and interesting issue is how do we explain the surplus of liberals
in academia." Brandon went on to hypothesize that "there
is a statistical association between the qualities that make for
good academics and those that lead to left-leaning political views.
But, stated this way the hypothesis still remains incredibly vague."
In a Chronicle letter to the editor on February 12, Keohane acknowledged
that the DCU "raised a question that deserves a thoughtful
answer.... For me, the question is not the personal political views
of members of our faculty or their party affiliation, it's the
quality of their scholarship and the strength of their teaching,
which includes ensuring that classrooms are open to diverse, often
contrary, views."
Keohane added that she believes that "no single political
perspective has a monopoly on intelligence" and that classrooms
are impoverished if they "become sterile forums where only
bland views can be expressed and everyone is overly careful not
to offend. Clear statements of well-articulated, provocative views
stimulate deeper thought, and more discussion, than the cautious
expression of ideas designed not to make anyone uncomfortable."
In response to the controversy, the Provost's Office, along with
Duke Democrats and Duke College Republicans, held, on March 1,
a panel, "The Politics of Academic Freedom: Does Political
Affiliation Matter?" Playing to an almost packed auditorium,
five panelists from different disciplines and across the political
spectrum weighed in on academic freedom, what makes a good professor,
and whether or not there are hiring biases at Duke when it comes
to political affiliation.
"Professors, no matter what their personal views...need to
ensure that students are exposed to a wide range of conflicting
views on subjects for which that is appropriate," said Provost
Peter Lange in his introduction. Arguing that a "neutral or
opinion-less classroom is likely not the best environment for active
learning," Lange called for "high standards of debate
and strong expectations that all will strive for those standards,
regardless of the professor's, or the student's, viewpoint."
Law professor William Van Alstyne, a leading scholar on free speech
and academic freedom, said party affiliation has no place in the
faculty hiring process. "The suggestion that one would have
to submit a party affiliation as part of identifying one's interest
in a department or university itself would immediately raise hackles
and suspicion as to why that's deemed to be an appropriate datum
to consider at all," he said.
University Counsel David Adcock, who identified himself as a conservative
and a former campaign manager for Jesse Helms, called the issue
of party affiliation "almost trivial and certainly banal" and "very,
very limited" as an indicator of political ideology. He also
argued that in two decades at Duke, "I have never encountered
one incident where the senior administration of this university
has expressed any but sentiment of the highest respect--even almost
sacred and aggressive respect--for principles of free speech." He
said the key question is whether faculty members, regardless of
their own beliefs, do their "duty" of maintaining an
open learning environment.
Political science's Michael Munger, however, questioned whether
Van Alstyne and Adcock were in a position to witness faculty bias
affecting conservative undergraduates. He also said statistics
showing a large preponderance of Democrats among faculty in certain
Duke departments could not be explained without considering the
possibility of bias, even if inadvertent. "The policy is for
openness," he said. "The actual expectation is that we'll
generally hire liberals."
William Schlesinger, dean of the Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences, said that in his four-year tenure on Duke's
appointments, promotions, and tenure committee, he never saw a
case in which a candidate's politics affected the tenure decision. "The
process of getting tenure at Duke is based on pure scholarship
and its impact in the field," he said. "Politics doesn't
play a particularly prominent role in the published scholarly work
of cell biology, art history, or English literature."
Vice provost and professor Cathy Davidson asserted that "I've
not encountered any Duke faculty member being harassed or discriminated
against because he or she is conservative. Nor have I ever heard
of students being so discriminated against or harassed." She
also said that no one should be surprised if Republicans--known
for their belief in the free market and capitalist values--gravitate
to fields that pay better than academic careers. "If there
were an enormous infusion of capital into education, such that
salaries for the nation's very, very best college teachers rival
that of our nation's top lawyers or doctors or CEOs or stockbrokers,
we well might have more Republicans teaching French," she
noted.
During the question period, a few students spoke of times when
their professors articulated their political views in a way that
made them feel uncomfortable. Faculty members expressed concern
about proposed national legislation that might limit academic freedom,
and several people reminded the audience that party affiliations
can include more than Democrats and Republicans.
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