The wait is over and the inevitable has happened: the University of Colorado yesterday formally dismissed Professor Ward Churchill. Interim President Hank Brown explained, in an open letter to the school's donors:
To help ensure that accountability, we cannot abide academic misconduct. More than 20 faculty members (from CU and other universities) on three separate panels conducted a thorough review of Professor Churchill's work and unanimously agreed that the evidence showed he engaged in research misconduct, which required serious sanction. The record of the case his faculty peers developed shows a pattern of serious, repeated and deliberate research misconduct that fell below the minimum standard of professional integrity, including fabrication, falsification, improper citation and plagiarism.
As a doctoral graduate of CU, I care deeply about issues of academic integrity at the institution because they reflect, for good or ill, on my own reputation. For this reason, if Churchill is guilty of academic dishonesty (and there seems little doubt at this point that he is), then he needed to go.
However, it's a huge mistake to see the Churchill case exclusively in terms of the events that have made the front pages. Crises like these happen for deeper, systemic reasons, and we'd all do well to understand the curious dynamics in Boulder that enabled these events.
Let's start with something else Brown said in that letter:
We are accountable to those who have a stake in the university: the people of Colorado who provide us $200 million annually in tax dollars, the federal entities that provide some $640 million annually in research funding, the donors who gave us more than $130 million this year to enhance academic quality, the faculty members who expect their colleagues to act with integrity, and the students who trust that faculty who teach them meet high university and professional standards. We are also accountable to the donors who invest their philanthropic dollars in CU. We have the obligation to you to ensure that the University of Colorado continues to be a place where your donation enhances our academic strengths and burnishes our reputation. Donors to CU gave a record $130 million this past fiscal year, and it is incumbent upon us to work to continue to be a place worthy of your investment.
Right - the university is accountable and it has a responsibility to ensure the integrity of its faculty and research. Ideally, though, that's the sort of thing that happens at the tenure review and promotion stages, not down the road when the professor says something that embarrasses the institution.
Churchill's professional progress has been unusual, to say the least. For starters, he never earned a PhD, and while you can argue with that standard if you like, a school like CU simply doesn't award tenure to non-PhDs (he was "one of only 12 tenured teaching faculty at UCB who do not hold an earned terminal degree"). He was promoted to full professor in 1997, and it appears he underwent all appropriate reviews during his promotion process and since.
So how did his academic dishonesty go unnoticed?
As it turns out, I might have some insight into this question... although I'll begin with a caveat: this is an analysis of a general dynamic and not a comment on the Churchill case specifically. However, I believe that the larger context I'm going to describe explains how the University of Colorado might encounter problems with the recruitment and promotion of minority faculty where other schools wouldn't. (And as always, I invite comment from those with even more insight into the situation.)
A few years back, while a PhD student at CU, I was invited to serve as a member of a faculty search committee. We were looking to hire a couple positions, and conducted a thorough national search for the best the field had to offer. Curriculum vitae (that's the technical term for those thick, heavy long-form academic résumés - none of that one-page crap here, folks) flowed into Macky Hall by the wheelbarrowfull, and we saw applications from a lot of seriously talented people. But as we winnowed wheat from chaff, a disturbing trend started to emerge. All of the best candidates we were seeing were white. We had a decent number of minority applicants, but frankly, they just weren't as qualified (at least on paper) as the white applicants.
Now, my initial reaction - the reaction of the entire committee, in fact - was that something wasn't right here. We knew damned good and well that there were plenty of talented minorities out there. Each of us knew talented minority scholars and professionals around the country who'd have been fantastic candidates. So the problem wasn't that they didn't exist, it was that they weren't applying.
I was baffled. Boulder is amazing. It's one of the most beautiful places in America and it's a cultural mecca. Who the hell wouldn't want to live there? A couple conversations with minority faculty members, though, showed me something I hadn't really thought about in any detail before.
A Dramatization
Minority Faculty Member: Sam, look around you - what do you see?
Me: I see white people.
Right. If you didn't count CU's scholarship athletes, there were roughly six minorities in Boulder, and a couple of black faculty members in my program explained to me that no matter how cool I thought Boulder was, the school was always going to have trouble recruiting talented minority faculty because there was nothing there for them. No black people. No black neighborhoods. No black churches. No black clubs. No black culture of any sort. (It's harder for me to say how this dynamic looked to Native American scholars - there seemed to be even less in the way of their culture, but I have no personal experiences to draw on there.)
In a place like Boulder, a town that's just overrun by what we might call "salon liberals," we liked to tell ourselves that we were largely past racial divides in structuring our personal lives and our communities. While that's admirable, it's also not terribly realistic, is it? When push comes to shove, it's easier to be magnanimous and open-minded on these issues when you’re surrounded by people who look like you and come from places where they mostly share your cultural experiences and assumptions and practices. In truth, though, regardless of how open the minds are all around you, it's going to be hard living and working in a place where you're a novelty. It may not be properly enlightened of me to say these things, but the truth is that while I feel like I have a pretty clear head on the issue of race, I'd be uncomfortable living in a town where white folk constituted less than 1% of the population.
That's the context in Boulder. Very white. But what does this have to do with the Churchill case? Well, universities - especially state universities in places like Boulder - are brutally conscious of diversity issues. It's a legal mandate, yes, but it's also a lot more than that. This is a community that understands the inherent value of diversity in promoting a healthy educational environment and that feels a moral obligation to fairness in hiring.
So the committee decided to get proactive on the question by actively soliciting applications from specific minority candidates we knew or knew of and thought might be well-suited to the jobs we were hiring, and this process did turn up a couple people that the committee and the faculty at large were quite impressed with. I remember sitting in The Sink up on the Hill talking with one of the guys, a rising superstar from a major Midwestern newspaper who struck me as the sort of person we'd be lucky to land, and I recall trying to feel out his interest in coming to CU. He was nice, he was complimentary, he said all the right things, but I think I knew right then and there that he wasn't coming to Boulder.
We wound up hiring a white candidate - a good one, too. But as good as she was, our search made Boulder one person whiter than it had been the day before.
I keep insisting this has some possible relevance to the context in which Churchill was hired and tenured. At CU, you have a place that's way too white to suit it. The very composition of the place is an impediment to change. The community knows it has a race problem, but chasing whites out of town and forcibly importing minorities isn't an option. So what tools does the school have at hand to address its horrific diversity situation?
My search committee went the extra mile, actually hunting down minority applicants, and if that offends some part of you that thinks race should play no role in hiring or recruiting or promotion, fine. I'm telling you how it is, and I'm also telling you that this is a process engaged in by good people acting in good faith. I know these people. I was one of them.
Meanwhile, across campus, you have a guy - a minority candidate (although that now seems at issue, too) getting tenure despite what a lot of folks see as a wholly undeserving record of scholarship. It has been asserted by people close to the case that corners were cut, and the impression that emerges is that CU promoted Churchill not because of his qualifications, but because of his race. Do I know that this was the reasoning? No. Based on my knowledge of the racial dynamics of the institution, can I believe this is what happened? Yup.
And I empathize fully with those who made the decision to do so, even as a part of me is appalled at the decision. But what do you do when a) you're committed to a diverse community, but b) qualified minority candidates often say no thanks?
I can't always defend the decisions that get made under these circumstances, but I can understand the complexity and conflict of the environment in which they occur. In the micro, these kinds of "demographically aware" decisions may strike us an unjust when we examine them out of context, but if you argue that we have to think about the big picture, and that perhaps there are cases where you have to seed the clouds if you want it to rain, well, I have some sympathy for that position. Maybe the only way to evolve a Boulder, Colorado into the sort of place that a top-tier minority candidate would see as a desirable destination long term is to cut a corner or two in the short term. Maybe.
There is plenty about this argument that bothers me, so save your breath yelling the obvious and prefabricated at me. I'm also aware of the laughable naïveté of talking about Americans thinking or acting in the long term. I didn't write this because I have any kind of moral certainty in my head or an acceptable policy in my heart. It is what it is - I'm not happy about the Churchill affair, but knowing Boulder as I do, I can imagine how it might have happened.
(By Sam Smith - xposted from Scholars & Rogues)