With Professor Mahaffey's permission we repost her letter to Chancellor Wise:
August 27, 2014
Chancellor Phyllis Wise
Dear Chancellor Wise:
What follows is a response to your post of September 22, 2014, “The
Principles on Which We Stand.”
I served for two years as the
University Ombudsman at my former university, and one of my main
responsibilities was to educate (tactfully) faculty and staff about what
constitutes professional conduct, and how it is essential for the establishment
and maintenance of intellectual community.
One of the things I learned was that professional conduct is not simply
a matter of civility. Civility is a form of politeness, but what is most
important for professional conduct is respect. In Friday’s posting, you
acknowledge the importance of mutual respect, but in a discussion of the
importance of mutually respectful discourse.
I must nevertheless question whether the actions taken by the administration demonstrate respect toward the
faculty: not only Professor Salaita, but also the department that proposed his
hire, and the many faculty members who have protested this decision. Does this
method of refusing to approve a hire at the last minute without consultation
show respect for faculty judgment, or concern for the consequences that are
being borne by the faculty?
It is of course highly desirable for an
intellectual community to value respectful discourse, but at the same time it
should be clear that when individuals feel passionately about ideas and events,
such passion puts pressure on civility. What could the administration have done that would have allowed management
to express its concerns while remaining respectful of the faculty? Obviously,
consultation with the department in question prior to taking action would have
demonstrated greater respect. Clear communication between the administration
and the faculty about the ways in which their respective missions may conflict
might also be useful. The administration needs to make it more explicit that
their mission is to safeguard the image of the University of Illinois (which is
important for fundraising) while fostering and protecting intense, thoughtful debate about difficult issues. The
faculty’s mission is to think critically, creatively, and often resistantly
about issues and presuppositions that might otherwise go unchallenged. Perhaps
we need to establish a task force on the use of social media to express
personal or political opinions. Is it a violation of ethics to express strong
opinions publicly, even when the commentator does not identify himself as an
employee of the university? In the information age, isn’t it impossible to keep
an individual’s institutional affiliation from the knowledge of anyone who
wants it? Was there any evidence that Professor Salaita would not have treated
students with respect? Does the fact that he has strong political opinions mean
that he would be intolerant in the classroom?
I am suggesting that the administration
has violated—through actions, not modes of self-expression—the very values that
your eloquent post professes to endorse: mutual respect. In my view, it is the
administration’s disrespect for strong (and strongly worded) convictions, a
disrespect expressed through highhanded action (taken without faculty
consultation), that is responsible for the widespread reaction of the academy
against the position taken by the administration at the University of Illinois.
Sincerely
Vicki
Mahaffey
Clayton
and Thelma Kirkpatrick Professor of English and Gender and Women’s Studies
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