The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
"MIT No Longer Requiring Diversity Statements from Prospective Faculty"
The Hill (Lexi Lonas) reports:
[MIT] announced Monday it no longer will require diversity statements from prospective faculty.
The school said the decision was directed by President Sally Kornbluth "with the support of the Provost, Chancellor, Vice President for Equity and Inclusion, and all six academic deans."
"My goals are to tap into the full scope of human talent, to bring the very best to MIT, and to make sure they thrive once here," Kornbluth said in a statement.
"We can build an inclusive environment in many ways, but compelled statements impinge on freedom of expression, and they don't work."
Very glad to see that. For my views on the subject, see this post, which I'm also passing along below:
[* * *]
I very much enjoyed participating in this Federalist-Society-organized webinar, together with Prof. Brian Soucek (UC Davis). As is common for such Federalist Society programs, the panelists were chosen to present different views (though I think it's fair to say that Prof. Soucek and I agree on some things as well as disagree on others), and were not chosen exclusively from within the Federalist Society: Prof. Soucek is generally not at all a Federalist, to my knowledge.
I hope you find it as interesting as I did! Here's the blurb:
In recent years, universities have increasingly required 'diversity statements' from faculty seeking jobs, tenure, or promotion. But statements describing faculty's contributions to diversity, equity, and inclusion are also increasingly under attack. Criticisms first made in tweets and blog posts have expanded into prominent opinion pieces and, more recently, law review articles. These attacks are having an effect. Within universities, faculty-wide resolutions for and against mandatory diversity statements have been called and academic freedom committees have been asked to intervene. Outside universities, lawyers are recruiting plaintiffs to challenge diversity statement requirements in court.
Watch our experts in a discussion on Professor Brian Soucek's recent article in the UC Davis Law Review about these diversity statements fleshing out the criticisms and developing a framework to address if universities can require diversity statements without violating either the Constitution or academic freedom.
You can also read Prof. Soucek's full article. As to my views, I was delighted to see a commenter write,
I came into this conversation thinking "what's the big deal with DEI statements?" and generally on the same page as Prof Soucek. However, I think Prof Volokh's thought experiment absolutely devastated DEI statements.
So let me quickly summarize that thought experiment, which I gave in my part of the conversation (which begins at 16:45):
We get involved in another war. Much of the country, including some university system—whether Prof. Soucek's and my University of California or, say, the University of Nebraska—very much supports the war effort. So the University decides to offer faculty members and prospective faculty members an opportunity to mention their work related to the subject for purposes of evaluation, promotion, and hiring.
If, for instance, some professors joined the National Guard, which takes extra time, that could be used in deciding whether they were being productive enough scholars (just as other faculty might get extra time for tenure evaluation if they took semesters off because of illness or for parental leave). If they put on programs that helped returning soldiers, that would be counted as a form of "service" (faculty generally being evaluated on scholarship, teaching, and service, roughly in that order), even if normally service would otherwise focus on other subjects (such as service on university committees, or writing op-eds or blogs educating the public on the faculty's areas of expertise). If the History department decided that military history hadn't been taught enough, then indicating that one is teaching military history or is about to do so might count for extra teaching credit. I don't think this would violate the First Amendment or academic freedom principles. A university is entitled to set and recalibrate its priorities in these ways.
On the other hand, say the university said (following UC Davis) that "applicants seeking faculty positions … are required to submit a statement about their past, present, and future contributions to promoting [the war effort] in their professional careers," and did the same for existing faculty as well. This doesn't expressly forbid people from criticizing the war, or from just avoiding matters having to do with the war. Perhaps even behind closed doors the university might try to deal with this fairly, maybe even weighing scholarship or public commentary that comes to an anti-war conclusion equally with scholarship or public commentary that comes to a pro-war conclusion.
But wouldn't the message be quite clear—if you want a job here, or if you want to keep your job (especially if you're untenured), or if you want a promotion, you'd be wisest to express pro-war positions, or at least keep your anti-war positions to yourselves? And is that consistent with the First Amendment and academic freedom principles?
[* * *]
Note that the above refers to the First Amendment as to public universities, but I think it also represents general academic freedom principles applicable to serious private universities as well. Naturally, some private universities, historically generally religious ones, may require all sorts of pledges and theological or ideological commitments from their faculty members. But I think that, the more they do that, the more they put themselves outside the community of serious, open inquiry. I'm glad to see that MIT is trying to make sure it doesn't fall within that camp.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Interesting to see the Left once again come out in favor of Loyalty Oaths.
No doubt it's a lot of corporate bumpf and won't be missed, but it's interesting to see the right find a new/old way to express their racism.
No doubt it's a lot of statist trumpf and won't be missed, but it's interesting to see wokies find a new way to detect racism in everyone but themselves.
Hey, they're not the ones having a massive hissy fit over the mere mention of diveristy. 'PC' 'woke mind virus' 'DEI' 'outside agitators' 'uppity whatchamacallems.'
That’s because anything other than individual achievement and merit IS racism or bigotry by another name no matter who ends up getting the short end of the stick.
Exactly.
It's interesting to see the Left continue to support racial discrimination.
No doubt Nige projects more than a dozen IMAX theaters.
You have won a major victory for the subjugated straight white male, rejoice!
You've continued to spam the board with your same NPC talking points. Rejoice!
My goodness, Mr. Kneejerk speaks the same old nonsense that he always has
Same old shit in a new wrapping brings the same old responses.
NPCs are gonna NPC.
"it’s interesting to see the right find a new/old way to express their racism."
Not just the right. There's a leftist in one of the other threads claiming that forming human chains around polling places to prevent black people from voting is a legitimate way to advance policy goals.
I said civil disobedience is a legitimate means of effecting change.
The rest is just you extrapolating some tendentious bullshit from that.
No, I asked you specifically if forming human chains around polling places to prevent black people from voting was a legitimate means of effecting change, and you said it was.
Properly understood, civil disobedience involves disobeying laws that are believed to be unjust, not disobeying just laws in order to achieve ends believed to be just.
But it only works when the public is likely to agree with you about the law you're disobeying being unjust.
That's why the left keeps trying to redefine the term to include general lawlessness in the context of protest: They don't really think the public is going to agree with them, they're just engaged in extortion. "Give me what I want or I'll keep disrupting your lives!"
And, of course, many of their demands aren't amenable to classic civil disobedience even if the public DID agree with them. If your goal is that the government side with Hamas instead of its victims, what relevant law is there for you to violate?
Or, maybe YOU are trying to retcon the definition so you can complain about protest you don't like.
Because somehow you think civil disobedience has to be cool and good, so you gotta remove bad stuff from that definition.
Or maybe I'm not, and you're just trying to dignify politically motivated lawlessness by stealing the good repute of people who actually DID engage in civil disobedience. By pretending it would have been the same thing if Rosa Parks had sat at the front of the bus, or if she had slashed the bus' tires or chained herself across the door so that nobody could get a ride.
"Or, maybe YOU are trying to retcon the definition so you can complain about protest you don’t like."
Is mike petrik also trying to retcon the definition? As I said yesterday, it's not uncommon for people to define civil disobedience strictly in terms of direct civil disobedience. But you just have to make it personal, don't you, Sarcastro?
I reject the idea that student occupations of administration buildings in the 1960s were not civil disobedience.
Your insistence that only the unjust law can be disobeyed is unsupported by history, and seems to me an attempt to put these encampments out of that historical narrative, as though all civil disobedience is good.
From ze wiki:
Ronald Dworkin held that there are three types of civil disobedience:
*”Integrity-based” civil disobedience occurs when a citizen disobeys a law they feel is immoral, as in the case of abolitionists disobeying the fugitive slave laws by refusing to turn over escaped slaves to authorities.
*”Justice-based” civil disobedience occurs when a citizen disobeys laws to lay claim to some right denied to them, as when Black people illegally protested during the civil rights movement.
*”Policy-based” civil disobedience occurs when a person breaks the law to change a policy they believe is dangerously wrong.
You’re cutting out 2/3 of the definition.
FFS it’s okay to say ‘this protest is for a bad thing’ you don’t need to argue it’s illegitimate to do so.
Campus sit-ins have been a thing in the civil rights movement for quite some time; were they not civil disobedience?
What the Fo-uck do you think January 6th was?
Accusing the right of being racist doesnt change the fact that the vast majority of racism exists from the left side of the political spectrum
lol. Sure, Sonja T. Charlottesville was a left wing thing.
It was, the violence part anyway
A few in Hollywood came out a few years back encouraging blacklists, and turnabout is fair play from 50 years ago, but that was a bridge too far since back then, the problem was the blacklist, not why people were put on it. In theory, anyway. So shut up Will & Grace.
Today is White Grievance Day at the Volokh Conspiracy, with the expected lathering of this blog's target audience.
Tomorrow could be Transgender Day, or Muslim Day, or Male Grievance Day, or Drag Queen Day, or Racial Slur Day, or Lesbian Day, or Hate Palestinians Day (although probably not, because yesterday was Hate Palestinians Day). or Black Crime Day at the Volokh Conspiracy.
Carry on, clingers.
With apologies to Tom Lehrer:
"Bow your head with great respect
And genuflect, genuflect, genuflect!"
from the Vatican Rag
I predict it won't change anything ... DEI is now firmly entrenched in hiring and proposal writing.
Candidates for competitive universities (like MIT) know well on what side the bread is buttered, and hiring committees will, no doubt, have individuals looking for political genuflection.
Doubt you will find many on here weeping about this.
Land acknowledgements are also a cringe I could do without. See also Latinx.
Won't be enough to not require them, if they're even permitted the fact that you don't bother will communicate enough.
It’s a good point, but they’re hard to prohibit.
We have an electronic system that only permits submission of CV, statement of research interests, statement of teaching interests.
Nevertheless, quite a few applicants embed the equivalent of a DEI statement in one of those, usually the teaching statement. And the hell of it is, we really didn’t want (by state law!) a DEI statement, and the applicant really didn’t want to submit one.
But it appears they’re worried it’s a trick to catch them in omission, like you suggest, or that “teaching” is a code word for DEI.
Is saying you like to teach Afro-Americans how to throw Spears acceptable? And wouldn’t you love to see the NHL adopt DEI? That Bo Jackson/Gretzsky commercial was Hilarious
Let’s prohibit schools from accepting them. In the name of free expression.
Well, certainly not in the name of free expression, and not for fully private schools, of which Hillsdale is the only one I can think of.
But orchestras hold blind auditions for a reason, and it would be fully within the power of a government supporting one to demand that the auditions be blind, and prohibit circumventing that, in order to receive the support.
Why not "blind matriculation", as a condition of any government funding, including student loans?
Of course, we all know why the institutions don't want "blind matriculation": Because they actually WANT to racially discriminate. But that's not a desire we should humor unless the institution is fully private.
Yes, lets pass laws to go against the secret affirmative action you're sure is going on.
You just look stupid when you get like this. There’s nothing secret about affirmative action discrimination. It’s about as open as it gets.
Example: No White Faculty Allowed
So you didn't mean matriculation, or are you changing the goalposts?
You also look stupid when you start raving about "changing the goalposts", like you have some power to put fences around our conversations here.
I replied to the comment you made. You responded with a whole different thesis.
I can't speak to both, Brett they are pretty different things!
So please specify, which would you like to talk about - student admissions, or faculty hiring?
Oh, you think racial discrimination in faculty hiring, and racial discrimination in student admissions, are pretty different things?
Are you sure you want to go with that? Is there even any point in trying to make this distinction important in your mind, when I've provided proof of both going on?
Why would you expect an institution that racially discriminated in one area to refrain from it in another area?
Well, he thinks that forming human chains around polling places to prevent black people from voting is a legitimate means of advancing policy goals, so lord knows what's going on in that head of his.
I don't think that TiP. You know I don't think that.
As I told you twice now, a method can be generally legitimate and it's ends be illegitimate.
Quite lying abut what I say, it really shows your ass.
"As I told you twice now, a method can be generally legitimate and it’s ends be illegitimate.
Quite lying about what I say, it really shows your ass."
You said that civil disobedience was legitimate even if its ends were immoral.
And if you think you see my ass, it's entirely your imagination.
University of Minnesota ‘evaluating’ program that bans white students after discrimination complaint
It's not limited to academia, of course:
1 in 6 hiring managers have been told to stop hiring white men, survey finds
EXCLUSIVE: Columbia, NYU, and other top med schools hit with civil rights complaints for discriminating against white and Asian teens by making it easier for blacks and others to join introductory classes
Justice Department Finds Yale Illegally Discriminates Against Asians and Whites in Undergraduate Admissions in Violation of Federal Civil-Rights Laws
Are you going to continue looking stupid pretending this is some secret policy that I’m just imagining?
The usual grab-bag of crap when one goes hunting for anecdotes:
1 actual reporting on faculty hiring.
1 complaint about student admission
1 complaint about a med school prep program
1 *ahem* online survey about hiring not in academia (really?)
1 actual finding about faculty hiring...from 2020.
A mere complaint doesn't prove anything.
You have always had a ridiculously low threshold to assume a massive national plot by liberals.
Heck, these days it seems you don't even need to picture the plot, since your sources are not only not probative, they are all over the place on what's going on.
So you want blind hiring in all workplaces, and blind admissions to schools.
To combat a set of plots against white people that you're sure is going on based on looking for stories of it going on and having zero threshold for what was actual evidence.
Yeah, sounds about right for you.
This is entirely enough to establish that I'm not imagining it, even if it doesn't constitute iron clad proof that it's happening at every last institution.
You're absurd at this point, no amount of evidence is enough for you, you just dismiss it with a wave of your hand.
A chickenshit solution to a non-problem. But if it shuts down the caterwauling without actually impeding any legitimate goals, why not?
Word.
A strong, mainstream school will no longer require DEI statements.
A strong, mainstream school will no longer inflict a Federalist Society law professor on its students.
I'll take that week every week.
So did Penn State Recruits(who can blame them?Those Poppin Penn State Uniforms? Plain White Helmet, Jersey, Pants, Socks, with the Joe Pa Black Shoes!
The chickenshit is on your toast, not MIT's.
1983 when I applied to Med School, MCAT scores that would get you rejected as a White, and would get your Schools PreMed Advisor sent a nasty letter from Med Schools about wasting their time with unqualified applicants, would get Afro-Amuricans(ht Colon Powell) into any School, with tuition paid to boot.
Southern State Screw-els kept wondering why none of the minority applicants they accepted would accept the acceptance (what?)
If you were Jamal Syphillis Jefferson, where would you rather spend 4 years? Palo Alto or Augusta GA?
Frank