Thursday, January 25, 2024

Higher education needs to reform itself. It also needs to defend itself. - JEREMY C. YOUNG, the Hill

It’s true that higher education needs to reform itself. But more than ever, it also needs to defend itself. 
In the wake of Claudine Gay’s ouster at Harvard on the heels of Liz Magill’s departure from the University of Pennsylvania presidency, Manhattan Institute senior fellow and New College of Florida trustee Christopher Rufo took credit, gloating that his real objective was not to enforce plagiarism standards or prevent campus antisemitism, but “to eliminate the DEI bureaucracy in every institution in America.” In doing so, Rufo made clear what we at PEN America have long observed. While there are very real problems on college campuses — many of which do stem from challenges with antisemitism, free speech and diversity, equity and inclusion offices — bad-faith actors are using this as a pretext to promote a longstanding and largely unrelated political agenda that is hostile to higher education as a whole.