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No Charges, No End in E-Mail Fight

June 25, 2009

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In a limited sense, the case of William I. Robinson is over.

On Wednesday, he was notified that a faculty committee had found no "probable cause" to undertake a full investigation of complaints filed against him related to e-mail messages he sent to his students in which he compared Israelis and Nazis. Further, he was notified that the administration at the University of California at Santa Barbara had accepted the faculty members' analysis, and that the case was over -- without his ever having faced formal charges before a disciplinary committee.

Supporters of Robinson, a tenured professor of sociology, agreed with those findings. But they said that grievances filed over e-mail messages sent in January should have been seen immediately as baseless, and that allowing the case to linger for months endangered the academic freedom of Robinson and others.

"We're pleased, but this decision is too late," said Yousef K. Baker, a graduate student and one of the organizers of the Committee to Defend Academic Freedom at UCSB. "I don't think it is enough for the university just to say that this case is terminated. The university needs to be held accountable for the chilling effect that their tardiness in doing what they have done now has created."

In a statement, Robinson said that he is waiting for “a public apology from the university as a first step in clearing my name after it has smeared my reputation and undermined my professional integrity.” He added that he plans to file a grievance over how he was treated in the case.

The case has attracted attention far beyond Santa Barbara, with the American Association of University Professors last month calling on the university to "pause" its inquiries because of the academic freedom issues involved. Cary Nelson, national president of the AAUP, said Wednesday night that "although I am pleased that the Robinson case has been closed, I am also concerned that unnecessary investigations of faculty exercising their academic freedom are having a serious chilling effect on our more vulnerable or less courageous colleagues."

The dispute dates to an e-mail message that Robinson sent to the approximately 80 students in January in a course about sociology and globalization. The e-mail contained an article criticizing the Israeli military's actions in Gaza. Part of the e-mail was an assemblage of photos from Nazi Germany's persecution of Jews and from Israel's actions in Gaza. Students were invited to look at the "parallel images." A message from Robinson argued that Gaza would be like "Israel's Warsaw."

In February, the Anti-Defamation League's Santa Barbara office wrote to Robinson to protest the e-mail and to urge him to repudiate it. "While your writings are protected by the First Amendment and academic freedom, we rely upon our rights to say that your comparisons of Nazis and Israelis were offensive, ahistorical and have crossed the line well beyond legitimate criticism of Israel," the letter said. It went on to say that the "tone and extreme views" in his e-mail were "intimidating to students," and that using his university e-mail to send "material that appears unrelated to" his course violated university standards for faculty members.

Following that letter, two students in the course dropped the class and filed complaints against Robinson. One student wrote that she felt "nauseous" upon reading the e-mail, and felt it was inappropriate. A second student complaint accusing Robinson of being unprofessional -- also from a student who dropped the course after receiving the e-mail -- said that Robinson has "clearly stated his anti-Semitic political views in this e-mail."

Under Santa Barbara's faculty governance system, such complaints go to a "charges officer" and then -- if they are serious -- a committee may be formed, somewhat like a grand jury, to determine whether formal charges should be brought against the professor. Robinson and his supporters have maintained that the e-mail was so clearly covered by academic freedom that the faculty charges officer should have dropped the matter. Instead, a committee was formed to determine whether the charges merited consideration by the standing committee that considers such allegations and can recommend sanctions against a professor. It was that non-standing committee that determined that there was no need to bring charges for a full investigation. Under the university's rules, no official statement is released about why charges were not brought. But earlier memos suggested that the two rules Robinson was accused of violating were measures that bar faculty members from "significant intrusion of material unrelated to the course" and "use of the position or powers of a faculty member to coerce the judgment or conscience of a student or to cause harm to a student for arbitrary or personal reasons." (Many of the documents related to the student complaints and various university communications about the situation may be found on the Web site of the Committee to Defend Academic Freedom at UCSB.)

The position of Robinson and his supporters has been that Israel's conduct in Gaza was in every way appropriate as a topic for discussion in a class on global issues, and that the complaints filed against him were a simple case of students (and some pro-Israel groups) disagreeing with Robinson's analysis. Robinson could not be reached Wednesday, but last month he told Inside Higher Ed that the charges against him were "absolutely absurd." He noted that he is Jewish and said that he abhors anti-Semitism, and that his academic freedom is being violated by the university taking seriously charges that link his e-mail criticisms of Israel's government with anti-Semitism. "This is all because I have criticized the policies of the State of Israel."

Stand With Us, a pro-Israel group that has been organizing petition drives to back the idea of a full investigation of Robinson, issued a statement Wednesday night questioning the university's decision. "We are surprised and disappointed that UCSB chose not to uphold their standards for professional conduct, and that it has blurred the lines between responsible education and the peddling of propaganda. It is unfortunate that students will continue to be victims of partisan indoctrination and misinformation," said the statement, from Roz Rothstein, international director of the organization.

The Stand With Us Web site features analysis on why the group does not feel Robinson's e-mail should be protected by academic freedom.

"We applaud the UCSB administration’s decision to investigate whether Robinson abused the Faculty Code of Conduct guidelines. This investigation is critical for stemming the politicization of academia and the rising academic support for anti-Israel propaganda," says the Web site (in a posting that does not reflect Wednesday's news that the investigation is over). "The administration will be under intense political pressure from those who oppose the investigation. Let the administration know that there is also strong public support for their decision."

The Academic Senate at the university has passed a resolution to study how this investigation was handled -- and many faculty members have questioned whether the process used was appropriate, with many critics noting that pro-Israel groups have encouraged criticism of Robinson.

Paul Desruisseaux, associate vice chancellor for public affairs at Santa Barbara, said that because this case is a personnel matter, the university would have no comment on the case. He said that it was important to note that the university "places great importance on the defense of academic freedom," but that academic freedom "does not exempt a faculty member from the provisions of the faculty Code of Conduct," or limit the ability of people inside or outside the university to file grievances.

Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, blogged in support of the university's decision Wednesday. "Stripped of the jargon of sociology and the politicization of the issue by both sides, the question becomes whether or not the professor in what essentially amounts to a global politics class can give his opinions about global politics," he said. "While many of his critics would prefer to see the Professor Robinsons of the world denied this right, in the end, we all benefit from classroom and academic discussions in which the exchange of ideas is as free as possible."

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Comments on No Charges, No End in E-Mail Fight

  • Posted by observer on June 25, 2009 at 7:15am EDT
  • Academic freedom, indeed all forms of free speech, should be protected. Try speaking out re: the other side of that beleaguered middle eastern area with cartoons or a film, like the producer in Holland, and instead of some committees raising objections, one might find himself stabbed with the group's objections impaled on his body. I have not heard of the Israelis expressing their dismay that way. People can be so bold, brave, and outspoken when their evil words have no consequences to themselves, only injury and anguish to others.

  • Posted by cacambo on June 25, 2009 at 9:45am EDT
  • Dear (anonymous) observer:

    Have no fear! You'll soon be marveling at the risky exercise of unfettered free speech as the rest of us anonymous "bold, brave, and outspoken" posters weigh in on this issue over the course of the day.

  • "Observer" is failing the life class
  • Posted by TheProfessor on June 25, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • Observer, is your comment just a random stream of semi-consciousness, or is it fully intended and designed as a complete and serious non-sequitur?

  • An anti-Israel statement is not an anti-semetic statement
  • Posted by Mike , Prof at LSU on June 25, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • We would not dream of offering such coddling to any other nation. To compare any other countries soldiers or political actions to the Nazis wouldn't so much as inspire a whisper of controversy. No country's political decisions are above examination or discussion, especially a psuedo-theocracy. Before you dismiss me as an anti-semite, know that I married a Jewish woman.

  • Speech is easy, knowldege is difficult
  • Posted by Gadfly on June 25, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • As the details of the issue emerged, it became more difficult for some of us to disagree with Professor Robinson’s right to send the message he did. However, before he demands an apology from the University, he first should offer one to Clio for his abuse of history – attempting to draw a parallel to what occurred in Central and Eastern Europe under Hitler to anything that has occurred in the Middle East.

    I refer those who want to understand this better to:

    http://www.nybooks.com/articles/22875

  • Proper balance
  • Posted by Lawman on June 25, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • Legally speaking, the University had to investigate b/c valid complaints were filed by legitimate members of the University's community: students. Why they took so long is another matter, but they would probably say they wanted to be thorough.

    On the merits of the issue, while no country or group should be above critical review on a university campus, what Professor Robinson did came right up to the line of yelling "fire!" in a crowded theater. Israel, which had pulled out of Gaza, was defending itself from literally thousands of rockets beign fired into its territory from Gaza. I challenge him to explain the similarity of that to the Nazis intentionally murdering approximately 2,000,000 Jewish children under the age of 10 in gas chambers constructed for this purpose and spread around Europe.

    Therefore, in my opinion, what Professor Robinson did by setting forth an obviously false analogy in order to criticize the Israelis/Jews did feeds notions of anti-Semitism. And, for that, he deserves the opprobrium he has received.

  • Free to be a Provocateur
  • Posted by Mitzy on June 25, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Robinson may have free speech and self-identified Jewishness on his side, but he certainly does not have intellect there as well. Comparing Israel with Nazi Germany is not only empirically absurd, it is equally absurd theatre. Robinson, like many, many sociologists I have known, is at best a contrarian and, at worst, a callous buffoon, heartlessly provoking Jews with shocking rhetoric and forensically indefensible assertions, all the while forgetting that the Grand Mufti of Palestine--and Palestinians in general--were Nazi sympathizers and who, today, continue to pray for a Judenfrei world.

  • What is not anti?
  • Posted by David at Cheyney University on June 25, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Mike you stated:

    " To compare any other countries soldiers or political actions to the Nazis wouldn't so much as inspire a whisper of controversy."

    Ok, since you teach at LSU, why don't you, in an email or in your classes, compare the American soldiers in Iraq or Afghanistan with Nazi soldiers?

    Let us see the whispers...

    By the way, I am not defending Israel's actions, I just don't want to have an imbalanced point of view. Israelis are Nazis, but every other nation has the right to invade, kill, pillage for whatever sake.

    Israel deserves to be blamed, but let us blame every nation that has done so. Not selectively point the finger at one.

    "Before you dismiss me as an anti-semite, know that I married a Jewish woman."

    May be you married her to freely criticize the jews. What kind of statement is this anyway? It reminds me of an old Italian movie "A Very Special Day" where Marcello Mastroianni played a gay men who had a doctor's notice stating he was not gay. He said to Sophia Loren, "who other than a gay men would have a doctor's notice stating he is not gay?".

  • Posted by MQSmith on June 25, 2009 at 2:45pm EDT
  • Sorry, fellas, but I know the old lines. The check is in the mail. I'll still respect you in the morning. Some of my best friends are African-Americans/ Jews/ whatever group you then set out to deride. No one is like Nazis. NO ONE. Let us hope they never get reincarnated or repeated or anything of the sort.

    The professor is another of the ivory tower intellectuals who really doesn't believe that words matter and is lucky to live here and now, because if he lived in Germany in 1944, he'd have learned who and what real Nazis were, and how they operated. Tough words, maybe the undergraduates are awed.

  • A Need For Balance
  • Posted by A Need For Balance on June 25, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT
    •  

      The University had an obligation to investigate the charges. UCSB is an institution charged with the responsibility of education. This requires that information presented by faculty be presented in furtherance of that responsibility. I cannot understand how anyone, let alone a professor, could equate Israel's acts of self-defense against thousands of rockets with intentional extermination of millions by the Nazis.

      The comparison is so extreme and outrageous as to raise a serious concern that Professor Robinson's motive was not education. Well, then, what was his motivation?

       

  • Posted by Philoktetes on June 25, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT
  • I do not know whether William Robinson is an anti-semite, which he denies, or just an offensive buffoon, as Mitzy suggests. For that matter, I do not know if he actually is, as he claims to be, Jewish. (Robinson? . . . I wonder what the name used to be? Rubinsohn, perhaps?)

     

    As a dean, with close to four decades in higher education, what I do know is that this incident had nothing to do with academic freedom. The materials Robinson e-mailed to his students have only the most tenuous connection to the class he is teaching. Robinson himself admitted as much when he replied to an e-mail from one of the complaining students by stating that the materials were “just for your interest” and not intended for class discussion. Nor does his course “essentially amount to a global politics class,” as Greg Lukianoff incorrectly asserts. Readers can check this fact for themselves since Robinson’s syllabus is posted on line. If you do look at the syllabus, notice also his promise that he “will not be authoritarian in facilitating discussion .”

     

    I do not think that Israel is, or should be, above criticism, anymore than the United States is—or any other nation, for that matter. But I do believe that students should not be propagandized, and I have always tried to conduct class discussions on “opinionable matters” in such a way that my students would not be able to discern what my own position was. If a student advanced a bad argument, I pointed that out, even if I agreed with the position that student was trying to support. If a student made a good argument, using facts and logic to support it, I praised those efforts even when I thought the conclusion was ultimately inaccurate.

     

    Gosh, it would be refreshing to read some criticism of Israeli actions or policies that (1) is not an example of Godwin’s Law; (2) does not trot out some putative Jewish ancestor or relative to “prove” the author’s absence of any sentiments of Judenhasse; and (3) does not, whenever someone takes offense at the author’s deliberately-chosen-to-be-offensive language, whine about how the vast Zionist conspiracy is trying to stifle yet another “victim.”

     

    The problem with Robinson’s reductio ad Nazium is that it is both empirically untenable and deliberately calculated to cause hurt to anyone who happens to be Jewish. Is that being anti-semitic? Well, at the least it is engaging in racist hate speech.

     

    During the 12 years the Nazis were in power, they exterminated nearly 80% of Europe’s pre-war Jewish population in a systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored program based upon a bastardized “science” of racial ideology. There were, of course, other victims of Nazi brutality—the Roma, some of the Slavic peoples, homosexuals, etc. Yet between 80 to 90% of the victims of Nazi extermination camps were Jews.

     

    During the 62 years of Israel’s existence, Palestinian Arabs within Israel have enjoyed full political rights and social services (although they may sometimes have suffered socio-economic discrimination--as have blacks and other minorities in the US). They have always elected their own representatives to the Knesset, and Israel has today become a haven for homosexual refugees from other Arab lands.

     

    As a result of Israel's “genocidal” policies, the 1948 Palestinian Arab refugee population of approximately 700,000+ persons now numbers somewhere in excess of 4 million (according to 2005 UNRWA figures). If Israelis are Nazis, they just aren’t very good at it.

     

    It is the role of a university professor to make students uncomfortable, to encourage them to question their most cherished beliefs and opinions. But that role is not to indoctrinate. Because the relationship between a university professor and his or her students is by its nature one of unequal power, Robinson deserves censure for imposing his values and opinions on a “captive” audience who can never be sure what the consequences will be if they resist that indoctrination. Worse yet, he is doing this in regard to an issue that is outside the scope of the course he is teaching as that course is defined in his own syllabus.

     

    Robinson’s offense is not against Jews or Israelis. It is against his own students and the idea of a university.

  • Only in the academy
  • Posted by Steven Clark, PhD at University of Wisconsin on June 25, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT
  • What is it with academics? Do they only read the NYT? In his book, Terror and Liberalism, Paul Berman, provides an in depth and cogent analysis of Islamist thinking and the philosophies that developed the modern Islamist movement from Sayyid Qutb to Saddam's Bath Party. They inherited their anti-liberal thinking from the same intellectual influences that led to the fascism of Mussolini and Hitler.

    THAT is the mid-east connection to fascism. The book does a scholarly job documenting this connection, which sharply contrasts with the UC prof's clumsy, unscholarly, and clearly emotionally based appeal to anti-Zionism.

    Read Berman's book.

    Steven Clark, PhD
    University of Wisconsin

  • hypocrisy
  • Posted by Marcel Kincaid on June 26, 2009 at 5:15am EDT
  • What hypocrites the immensely biased and partisan "Stand With Us" is to complain about "the peddling of propaganda". They, like a number of people posting here, take the position that academic freedom doesn't extend to statements they don't approve of.

  • Thank you, Philoktetes
  • Posted by NM Mom on June 26, 2009 at 5:15am EDT
  • Your analysis provides needed perspective. To me there were two issues: Robinson's infringement of privacy and abuse of his authority in using the students' email to send propaganda materials; and the excess of the message itself. Israel is wrong in many ways and its policies amount to racism, whether deliberate or not. This email went way beyond that.