Israel-Palestine brouhaha at York rages on
Amid calls for Minister's resignation, prof says academics look "insular and arrogant"
The lead up to a three-day conference, intended to discuss the possibilities for peace between Israel and Palestine, is proving to be anything but peaceful.
As of a few weeks ago, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), in tandem with York and Queen’s University, was set to fully fund “Israel/Palestine: Mapping models of statehood and prospects for peace.” The mandate of the conference, which will run June 22 to 24, is to “explore which state models offer promising paths to resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, respecting the rights to self-determination of both Israelis/Jews and Palestinians.”
But last week, in a furious press release, the Canadian Association of University Teachers demanded that Gary Goodyear, the federal minister for science and technology, resign his position. The group alleged Goodyear had telephoned president of the SSHRC, asking him to reconsider the peer-reviewed decision to fund the conference.
“It’s unprecedented for a minister – let alone a minister from the department that funds the granting councils – to intervene personally with a granting council president to suggest that he review funding for an academic conference,” said CAUT executive director James Turk.
“This kind of direct political interference in a funding decision made through an independent, peer-reviewed process is unacceptable and sets a very dangerous precedent.”
The National Graduate Caucus of the Canadian Federation of Students joined the debate, echoing Turk’s angry sentiments on academic freedom. The group said Goodyear’s move continued a “dangerous trend” in the Harper government’s strategy of directing research funding to score political points.
The next day, in an interview with The Record, Goodyear struck back at his critics.
As this public debate raged, SSHRC said it asked the conference organizers about any changes in programming that may had been made. The council was told that the lineup changes made since last November were “minor and that the aims of the event remain unchanged in their essence. ”
Perhaps it might have ended there.
“Your action of requiring the conference organizers to immediately provide you with a list of all changes to their program since their grant was awarded violates SSHRC’s own policies and legitimates the Minister’s unprecedented and unacceptable political intervention in SSHRC’s peer-reviewed granting process,” wrote CAUT.
“When asked by the Minister to review SSHRC’s peer-reviewed approval of the York University conference, you should have pointed out to him that his request was inappropriate — that every minister before him had understood it was unacceptable to bring political pressures to bear on academic decision-making.”
“By intruding into the planning of an academic event after a funding decision has been made, SSHRC’s actions are likely to have a most unfortunate chilling effect on academics considering the exploration of controversial or unpopular topics,” seconded the York Osgood profs.
“In addition, by casting doubt on the integrity of its own procedures, SSHRC has empowered those who would devalue academic research and discourse by insisting that academic freedom be reserved only for those who happen to share their point of view.”
York, for its part, remained cautiously neutral in the matter. The school, according to multiple press releases, said it recognizes the freedom of independent scholars to organize conferences on matters of “legitimate academic inquiry” and that “it would be entirely inappropriate for the university administration to intervene in…the academic content of such events.” The school also made it very clear that, as far as it was concerned, academic freedom should not be a shield for racism and bigotry in any form, including anti-Semitism.
In the most recent volley, but assuredly not the last,
According to him, Goodyear’s request to the council was a reasonable reaction to citizens’ concerns, and CAUT’s call for him to resign was “irresponsible.”
“The call for Goodyear’s resignation makes academics look insular and arrogant,” wrote Hunt. “It creates the image of stuffy intellectuals who think they’re above everybody else and don’t have to account for how their money is being spent. In these troubled economic times, advocates of higher education cannot afford to maintain such a reputation.”
What do you think about this whole debacle? Let us know.



The public has a right to complain when their money is being spent on conferences that have partisan political goals. And it’s the minister’s job to look out for the well being of Canadians.
He probably singled out this conference because of the high likelihood of anti-Semitism. I commend the minister for trying to protect York from more of this tiring hatred.
But I don’t know that it’s fair to single out this one event. In the interest of academic freedom, SSHRC funding should only be denied when there is clear evidence of behaviour that contravenes the basic consensus of Canadian values (as set out in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.) Does this conference violate the Charter or is it simply promoting a view that is politically polarizing?
I guess that’s what a review will find out. But let’s hope the minister is willing to review more conferences and grants from SSHRC.
Josh,
I am not sure if academic freedom should be equated with a consensus on Canadian values. Violating the Charter is not the issue. The issue is whether the conference is properly academic. If it isn’t academic,and is promoting objectives external to academic goals, than it is problematic for it to be held at a university and funded with research money.
The question should be whether the objectives are scholarly or political. Some might say there isn’t a difference but anybody who has even the tiniest familiarity with the business of the university will know the difference.
As for whether the CAUT is right or wrong to call for the resignation of Goodyear. Though I agree academic decisions should be free of political intervention, the decision to transfer taxpayer money to the granting councils is a political decision. I find it difficult to sympathize with a position that states all education and research should be publicly funded but that the government should have only a limited say. What fantasy world does CAUT live in?
The notion that the government can interfere because it is spending public money sounds plausible on the surface, but only on the surface. After all, the CBC is funded by the government, but I would be angry if a government minister asked the CBC to “review” how it was covering the Middle East because some of the people they interviewed had views the minister found troubling. “Is this really journalism,” the minister might ask ominously, “or has it become something else?” I would say the same is true for publicly-funded artists: I don’t want some politician asking after playwrights to make sure their work is not troubling. It should be troubling.
So just as government-payed journalists must be left free from government interference, so should academics at public universities be free to ask the questions — however controversial — that they want to ask. Strangely enough, the responsible thing to do with such money is to ensure people deserve it in the first place, and then NOT ask too many questions.
I think the comparison with the CBC makes sense. The idea (at least, we hope) is that there is a consensus to fund certain organizations with certains broad goals that are defined by politicians, but that these organizations – public media, research institutions or universities – are more credible and more useful to the public if they are sufficiently autonomous from short-term politics, and the personal biases of individual politicians or parties.
This is no different in essence from the attempt (bill C-10 I think) to give the power to the Heritage Minister to screen subsidies applications for films that would have content “contrary to Canadian values”.