A
Tale of Two Professors Under Attack at DePaul
By John K. Wilson
This
fall, DePaul University has faced two academic freedom controversies,
with mixed results. When the case involved a tenure-track professor,
DePaul University has (so far) stood up for his rights, albeit
quietly. When the case involved an adjunct instructor who insulted
students outside of class, DePaul quickly got rid of the teacher.
When the University of California announced plans to publish DePaul
professor Norman Finkelstein’s book Beyond Chutzpah: On
the Misuse of Anti-Semitism and the Abuse of History, Harvard
law professor Alan Dershowitz struck back even before the book
was published. Dershowitz had his attorney, Rory Millson, threaten
legal action against the University of California regents, the
provost, plus the 17 directors of the University of California
Press and its 19 members of the faculty editorial committee. Dershowitz
accused the Press of being “part of a conspiracy to defame”
him, and his attorney threatened, “The only way to extricate
yourself is immediately to terminate all professional contact
with this full-time malicious defamer.”
Dershowitz warned the University of California press that he would
“own the company” if Finkelstein’s book accused
him of plagiarism. Finkelstein argues that Dershowitz lifted quotations
from another author’s book, but cited the original citations
for the quotes rather than the book where he apparently got them.
This is lazy scholarship by Dershowitz, but not what is commonly
regarded as plagiarism. However, plagiarism is a disputed term,
and everyone should be free to promote their own definition of
it without legal penalty. According to Dershowitz, “the
First Amendment gives no author the right to make up defamatory
lies and publish them.”
Finkelstein’s book was originally going to be published
by the New Press, but Finkelstein changed publishers after Dershowitz’s
legal threats delayed the book (Dershowitz proudly takes credit
for getting New Press to drop the book, a claim denied by New
Press and Finkelstein). The University of California Press hired
four lawyers to screen the book and forced Finkelstein to make
changes to his manuscript and tone down some of his accusations.
Dershowitz declared, “Any person has a right to make an
honest mistake, but no one has the right to defame another maliciously
and knowingly.” Actually, everyone should have the right
to defame another person, as Dershowitz does when he declares
about Finkelstein, “he’s a Jew and an anti-Semite—
and a neo-Nazi supporter, and a Holocaust trivializer, and a liar,
and a falsifier of quotations and documents.”
Dershowitz wasn’t satisfied with his legal threats against
the University of California Press. He apparently wrote California
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger asking to have the book banned.
“You have asked for the Governor’s assistance in preventing
the publication of this book,” Schwarzenegger’s office
responded to Dershowitz in a Feb. 8, 2005 letter, but “he
is not inclined to otherwise exert influence in this case because
of the clear, academic freedom issue it presents.”
Now that Finkelstein’s book has been published, Dershowitz
is promising not to sue Finkelstein or his publishers (“If
I wanted to sue him, I’d own him”), but is instead
declaring that he will come to DePaul University at his own expense
in 2006 when Finkelstein is up for tenure in order to get him
fired: “I will document the case against Finkelstein. I’ll
demonstrate that he doesn’t meet the academic standards
of the Association of American Universities.” It’s
not clear what academic standards Dershowitz is talking about,
but open lobbying for firing a professor as an act of personal
revenge probably doesn’t meet them.
The attack on Finkelstein is not the only academic freedom controversy
at DePaul. Thomas Klocek, an adjunct instructor, got in a heated
argument with DePaul Palestinian students at an information table
on Sept. 15, 2004. After the students complained, he was suspended
on Sept. 24 and then fired. Dean Suzanne Dumbleton explained,
“The students’ perspective was dishonored and their
freedom demeaned. Individuals were deeply insulted…. Our
college acted immediately by removing the instructor from the
classroom.”
The DePaul administration accuses Klocek of “threatening
and unprofessional behavior,” although it has never specified
any threats made by Klocek. AAUP guidelines protect the extramural
speech of all academics, including adjunct instructors. Removing
an instructor for an argument outside of class is a violation
of due process, and firing him is even worse. Extramural comments
are only subject to punishment if they indicate professional misconduct,
and hostile arguments may be unpleasant but certainly do not rise
to that standard.
Although some critics point to Klocek’s firing as an example
of political correctness, it primarily reflects the powerlessness
of adjunct faculty and the corporatization of colleges where students
are seen as customers and those who offend them will be removed.