Get ready for the trainings! ADVERTISEMENT [The Review Logo]( You can also [read this newsletter on the web](. Or, if you no longer want to receive this newsletter, [unsubscribe](. In 2017 the theologian Paul J. Griffiths quit his chaired position at Duke following a dispute over diversity-training sessions. The [specific]( of contention was a âRacial Equity Institute Phase I Training,â which promised to help its trainees âproactively understand and address racism, both in their organization and in the community where the organization is working.â That sounded silly to Griffiths, who wrote an email to the theology faculty criticizing it: âItâll be, I predict with confidence, intellectually flaccid: thereâll be bromides, clichés, and amen-corner rah-rahs in plenty. When (if) it gets beyond that, its illiberal roots and totalitarian tendencies will show.â A controversy ensued; an investigation into Griffithsâs conduct was opened by the college; rather than await its findings, Griffiths [resigned](. As Thomas Pfau, another Duke theology professor, wrote in an email at the time, concerns among faculty members about the ever-increasing demands of such programming â âa seemingly endless string of surveys, memos, and âtraining sessionsââ â are common, but rarely publicly expressed, especially when the programming involves morally laudable goals like ending racism. âSo if faculty members choose to say in public (as Paul Griffiths has just done) what so many are saying in private,â Pfau wrote, âone might at the very least want to listen to and engage their concerns.â Instead, Duke investigated Griffiths for the crime of skepticism. The risk of compelled approval for training sessions of the sort Griffiths objected to has never gone away â and, in the wake of last springâs campus protests over the Israel-Hamas war, has perhaps increased. At least thatâs one conclusion you might draw from the [second report]( of Columbia Universityâs Task Force on Antisemitism, released last month. The report is unequivocal in its prescription of a radically expanded diet of compulsory anti-antisemitism training for âstudents, resident advisers, resident assistants, teaching assistants, student-facing staff, and faculty.â These include âin-person workshops,â lessons in âallyship practicesâ and âimplicit bias,â âcultural competency,â and so on. All in all, a âsustained and continuous effortâ is called for, since only âlong-term programsâ have any hope of effecting âbehavioral and organizational changes.â It should be said that some of the allegations of antisemitism included in the task forceâs report are extremely disturbing. These include an Israeli student who claims to have âoverheard a discussion between two healthcare professionals ... in which one said they would not treat her because she was Israeli"; a Jewish student with a mezuzah on her dorm-room door who was allegedly subjected to âbanging on her door at all hours of the nightâ by other students âdemanding she explain Israelâs actions"; and students who âhave reported having necklaces ripped off their necks and being pinned against walls while walking back to their dorms on Friday afternoon and when they were on their way to synagogue.â Some of these allegations lack corroboration, and itâs not clear whether all of the alleged perpetrators â for instance the necklace-rippers â were themselves Columbia students. But thereâs no doubt that the atmosphere on campus could become at times unacceptably toxic. The report cites posts from a Columbia-only social-media site: âIf you support Israel, you are a piece of filth not even worthy of being called human. ... I wish you enormous pain and suffering.â Another wishes death on âany IDF veteransâ â and singles out one Columbia student by name. Thereâs something odd about proposing that the remedy for all of this is training sessions. The author of the social-media posts wishing death on fellow students is presumably not susceptible to âimplicit bias training.â The alleged instances of harassment, bullying, and criminal assault are not resolvable by âallyship practices.â If the problem is as severe as the task force asserts, the solution is a non sequitur. At times, the report frames its expanded program of diversity training as merely a supplement to the existing DEI regime (they lament that, of the various DEI programs scattered across Columbiaâs myriad schools, only one appears to mention âantisemitismâ). But in a key passage, the authors suggest that DEI itself may bear some responsibility for the crude zealotry they accuse student protesters of when it comes to Israel, Jews, and Zionism. Too often, they say, a tendency toward Manichean dichotomies âdivide[s] identity groups into two master categories, marginalized and privileged,â and ârestrict[s] the Universityâs multicultural embrace to members of the former category.â In such blunt binaries, Jews have no place: âThis kind of thinking, often supported by DEI offices, makes it difficult to acknowledge our studentsâ experience of antisemitism, even when itâs happening on our own campus.â Why do the authors of the report assume that a DEI regime that they themselves consider to be part of the problem can be retrofitted to address antisemitism? What if the very terms of that regime â âallyship,â for instance â obscure more than they reveal about the various prejudices with which the task force on antisemitism purports to be concerned? There is a tension â even a paradox â at the heart of the report, one which the authors themselves seem dimly to perceive but never manage to address directly. The same cannot be said of the [report]( issued by Stanford University, a much more sophisticated document than Columbiaâs â although it, too, fails to resolve its underlying contradictions. Like Columbiaâs, Stanfordâs report zeroes in on âthe rigid and artificial binary conceptions of identityâ afflicting DEI doctrine, conceptions which both âreduc[e] complex social and political phenomena to slogans in utter contradiction with the universityâs mission of critical inquiryâ as well as âreinforc[e] negative stereotypes of certain groups, including Jews and Israelis.â Unlike Columbiaâs task force, Stanfordâs fully perceives its âCatch-22 situation.â Its members have been charged with remedying a problem with a toolkit that is itself part of the problem. Since that circle canât be squared, they suggest abolishing it. The current âapproach to belonging and inclusion is anathema to the Universityâs educational mission"; DEI programs as currently constituted âtend to propagate oversimplified histories and promulgate ideologies about social justice without subjecting them to the critical inquiry that is a core aspect of a university education.â Therefore, they offer the âradical proposalâ of replacing DEI with a set of pluralist commitments untarnished by the polarizing simplifications they see afflicting the current regime. At least, in the long term. âIn the short term,â on the other hand, they ârecommend that Jews and Israelis be added to the panoply of identities recognized by DEI programs.â Given the harshness with which the Stanford task force judges actually-existing DEI, this is somewhat baffling. After all, if DEI programs simplify history, promote ideology, reject critical inquiry, and are at odds with the universityâs mission â all of which the report alleges â why should they be expanded at all, even as a stop-gap measure? By contrast, the Columbia task force not only sees no contradiction but considers DEI training and the universityâs educational mission to be identical. âTraining,â they write, âis an especially good fit for a university because it is a form of education.â Will the anti-antisemitism trainings proposed in fact be forms of education? They might more resemble what Griffiths wrote of the âRacial Equity Institute Phase I Training,â distrust of which got him into so much trouble: âEvents of this sort are definitively anti-intellectual. (Re)trainings of intellectuals by bureaucrats and apparatchiks have a long and ignoble history.â SUBSCRIBE TO THE CHRONICLE Enjoying the newsletter? [Subscribe today]( for unlimited access to essential news, analysis, and advice. 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- âBodies of words are merely the traces of homilies â visible light from dead stars.â In Commonweal, Paul Griffiths [describes]( the orality of the Mass. Write to me at len.gutkin@chronicle.com. Yours, Len Gutkin FROM THE CHRONICLE STORE [The Future of Graduate Education - The Chronicle Store]( [The Future of Graduate Education]( Graduate education has enjoyed a jump in enrollment over the past five years, but it faces a host of challenges. [Order this report]( for insights on the opportunities and pitfalls that graduate-program administrators must navigate. JOB OPPORTUNITIES [Search jobs on The Chronicle job board]( [Find Your Next Role Today]( Whether you are actively or passively searching for your next career opportunity, The Chronicle is here to support you throughout your job search. Get started now by [exploring 30,000+ openings]( or [signing up for job alerts](. READ OUR OTHER NEWSLETTERS [Latitudes]( | [Race on Campus]( | [Teaching]( | [Your Career]( | [Weekly Briefing]( | [The Edge]( NEWSLETTER FEEDBACK [Please let us know what you thought of today's newsletter in this three-question survey](. [The Chronicle of Higher Education Logo]( This newsletter was sent to {EMAIL}. [Read this newsletter on the web](. [Manage]( your newsletter preferences, [stop receiving]( this email, or [view]( our privacy policy. © 2024 [The Chronicle of Higher Education](
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