We Aren’t the World

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Laurie King-Irani | In These Times | 11 December 2003 Already-strapped institutions of higher learning are facing an ideologically driven effort to limit funding for the study of cultures outside the United States. For nearly four decades, American universities have benefited from the U.S. Department of Education programs funded under Title VI of the

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Noam Chomsky: Thorn in America's side

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Tim Adams | The Observer | 30 November 2003 He’s ‘The Elvis Of Academia’ and ‘The Devil’s Accountant’. A relentless thorn in America’s side, Noam Chomsky has spent 50 years bringing his country’s elite to account. Here, he talks to Tim Adams about genocide and genitalia. On the railings outside my local train station

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Osama University?

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Michelle Goldberg | Salon | 6 November 2003 Neoconservative critics have long charged Middle Eastern studies departments with anti-American bias. Now they’ve enlisted Congress in their crusade. On Oct. 21, the House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill that could require university international studies departments to show more support for American foreign policy or

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Confronting the Evangelical Imperialists

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) VIJAY PRASHAD | Counterpunch | 13 November 2003 In mid-October, my email in-box began to receive forwards from Michael Bednar, a graduate student in the department of history at the University of Texas, Austin. The subject line suggested that it was an email joke: “Congress moves to regulate postcolonial studies.” Thanks to the vigilance

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When Did "Arab" Become a Dirty Word?

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Robert Fisk | CounterPunch/Independent | 4 November 2003 Is “Palestinian” now just a dirty word? Or is “Arab” the dirty word? Let’s start with the late Edward Said, the brilliant and passionate Palestinian-American academic who wrote–among many other books–Orientalism, the ground-breaking work which first explored our imperial Western fantasies about the Middle East. After

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Oxford professor is suspended for rejecting Israeli student

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Sarah Cassidy | Independent | 28 October 2003 An Oxford University professor who rejected a student because he was Israeli was suspended from the university yesterday and ordered to undergo equal opportunities training. In an unusual public statement spelling out the results of disciplinary proceedings, the university said Andrew Wilkie, an eminent pathology professor,

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UK professor suspended for Israeli ban

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) AFP/Aljazeera | Aljazeera | 28 October 2003 One of Britain’s most prestigious centres of learning has suspended a professor who rejected an Israeli student’s application, reportedly because of the Jewish state’s mistreatment of Palestinians. The University of Oxford on Monday suspended Andrew Wilkie without pay for two months after he told Amit Duvshani there

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Arab-Israeli politics split UK campuses

From the www.monabaker.com archive (legacy material) Arthur Neslen | Aljazeera | 29 October 2003 The decision by Oxford University to suspend a professor without pay for two months for refusing to teach a former Israeli soldier has ratcheted up campus tensions and may spark an academic rebellion. Andrew Wilkie, a pathology expert at the prestigious Pembroke College, was suspended on

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