- Academic boycott of South Africa
The Academic boycotts of South Africa were a series of
boycotts ofSouth Africa n academic institutions and scholars initiated in the 1960s, at the request of theAfrican National Congress , with the goal of using such international pressure to force the end South Africa's system of apartheid. The academic boycotts were part of a larger international campaign of "isolation" that eventually included political, economic, cultural and sports boycotts. The academic boycotts ended in 1990 when its stated goal of ending apartheid was achieved. F.W. Lancaster & Lorraine Haricombe, [http://ethics.iit.edu/perspective/pers15_1fall95_2.html The Academic Boycott of South Africa: Symbolic Gesture or Effective Agent of Change?] , Perspectives on the Professions, Vol. 15, No. 1, Fall 1995, accessed September 16 2006]During apartheid era, the academic boycotts were debated within anti-apartheid circles as to whether they were ethically justified and appropriate. Other critics of the boycott were various conservative groups worldwide who "disliked such anti-apartheid initiatives", and campus libertarians who "perceived a loss of academic freedom".Andy Beckett, [http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/Story/0,2763,858360,00.html It's water on stone - in the end the stone wears out] , The Guardian, December 12 2002, accessed September 16 2006]
Subsequent research in the post-apartheid area has claimed that the academic boycotts were more a "symbolic gesture of support" for anti-apartheid efforts rather than a direct influencer of the situation. Additionally, the academic boycott was perceived by the targets of the boycott, South Africa scholars, as unjust and discriminatory.
Motivation
The
African National Congress first called for an academic boycott to protest South African apartheid in 1958 inGhana . The call was repeated the following year inLondon . [ [http://www.flwi.ugent.be/cie/Palestina/palestina174.htm Building the Academic Boycott in Britain] , Hilary Rose, Resisting Israeli Apartheid: Strategies and Principles, An International Conference on Palestine, London, 5 December 2004]Formal Declarations
British Academics
In 1965, 496 university professors and lecturers from 34 British universities signed the following declaration in protest against apartheid and violations of academic freedom. They made special reference to the issuance of banning orders against Jack Simons and Eddie Roux, two well-known progressive academics.* Spotlight on South Africa, Dar es Salaam, November 26, 1965, reprinted by on the ANC Website for Historical Documents [http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/boycotts/academic65.html] ]
United Nations
In 1980, the United Nations passed a resolution urging "all academic and cultural institutions to terminate all links with South Africa".
Apartheid-Era Debate
"The ethical and other issues surrounding the academic boycott deeply divided the academic community, both within and outside South Africa."
Proponents
"Boycott proponents argued that academics should not be treated as an elite detached from the political and social environment in which it functions, especially since some of the South African universities seemed to be tools of the Nationalist government."
Desmond Tutu
Desmond Tutu , a prominent leader within the anti-apartheid, described his clear support for the academic boycott of South Africa. He wrote that it needed to be maintained for institutions which had a bad record in opposing apartheid, but could be lifted for others as the political situation eased. The boycott had "certainly made a number of people sit up and take notice, especially the so-called liberal universities." [http://www.cpsa.org.za/oldarc/252.html Bishopscourt Update Item No 252] , July 11, 1990]:"They thought that just as a matter of right they would find acceptance because they were allowing blacks into their establishments. I mustn't belittle them too much, I think that they did stand up for academic freedom and so forth, but I don't think myself actually that they were sufficiently vigorous and the boycott helped to knock sense into their heads, to realise that they did have a role in seeking to undermine that vicious system [of apartheid] ."
:"I would, I think, now still say that we maintain [the academic boycott] insofar as, if for instance academics from here want to go to South Africa then you want to look at who is inviting them. Under whose auspices are they going? Are they going to institutions that have a good track record in their opposition to apartheid? But I would say that as things begin to ease up, this ought perhaps to be one of the first of the constraints that goes to give some of these people the reward."
:"But I would myself say it is important for academics outside of South Africa also to say they want to reward places like UWC which stuck their necks out and then let these others get the crumbs that remain from the table."
Opponents
"Opposition to this boycott persisted throughout the 80s: conservatives around the world disliked such anti-apartheid initiatives; campus libertarians perceived a loss of
academic freedom ; and some liberal South Africans argued that their universities, as centres of resistance to apartheid, made precisely the wrong targets."From within anti-Apartheid circles
Opponents from within anti-Apartheid circles "argued that ideas and knowledge should be treated differently than tangible commodities, that obstacles to information access could actually hurt the victims of apartheid (for example, retard medical research and, ultimately, reduce the quality of health care), and that an academic boycott (in contrast to economic, trade, or political boycott) would not even be noticed by the South African government. Change is much more likely to occur by providing information than by withholding it."
"Such a boycott would cut a university off from its life blood, the nurturing flow of ideas.... The campaign plays directly into the hands of the destructive right-wing in this country which would also dearly love to cut us off from the world and its influences." [Editorial in Cape Times (1986), quoted in Book Review of Out in the Cold: Academic Boycotts and the Isolation of South Africa, Ralph Crawshaw, BMJ 1995;311:136 (8 July)]
Solomon Benatar, a critic, wrote that "Academic boycott has been justified as an appropriate political strategy in the struggle against the oppression of apartheid. Moral outrage against racist policies has led to the claim that academic boycott is a morally imperative component of a broader sanctions policy. This claim has neither been substantiated by a reasoned ethical argument nor weighted against an ethically justifiable approach that is consistent with universal humanitarian aspirations and which allows rejection of apartheid to be coupled to constructive endeavours." Solomon Benatar, [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?itool=abstractplus&db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=abstractplus&list_uids=2047948 Academic boycott: political strategy or moral imperative? Selective support as a justifiable alternative] , S Afr Med J. 80(4):206-7, August 17 1991, accessed July 6 2006]
"Selective" Alternatives
Solomon BenatorSolomon R. Benatar, [http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v343/n6258/abs/343505a0.html An alternative to academic boycott] , Nature 343, 505 - 506, February 8 1990, accessed September 16 2006.] , a professor at
University of Cape Town , and others advocated an alternative proposal: a "selective boycott"/"selective support" effort which would boycott South African organizations only if they were practitioners of apartheid and would extend support to organizations that did not practice apartheid. This alternative proposal was criticized because of both "the practical problems of implementation" and that "it implicitly endorsed the idea that political views are valid determinants of who should attend scholarly meetings, whose work should be published, and so on."Post-Apartheid Analysis
"That most of the scholars in our study judged the boycott to be an irritant or inconvenience, rather than a significant barrier to scholarly progress, suggests that it proved more a symbolic gesture than an effective agent of change."
Easily circumvented
"The academic boycott was more of an irritation than a true obstacle to scholarly progress."
"In most cases, scholars and libraries were able to circumvent the boycott one way or another-for example, by using "third parties" in less antagonistic countries although with delays and at greater expense."
Perceived as unjust discrimination
"Many [South African] scholars felt left out, isolated, unjustly discriminated against."
"Suspicions were created" ... "that a submission was really rejected for political reasons, not the reasons claimed", "that the high incidence of inactive research materials, such as biological agents and antibodies, received by South African institutions was not a mere coincidence"
Comparisons to academic boycotts of Israel
The academic boycott of South Africa is frequently invoked as a model for more recent efforts to organize academic boycotts of Israel.
Some invoke the comparison to claim that an academic boycott of Israel should not be controversial based a misconception that the academic boycott of South Africa was uncontroversial and straightforward. The reality, at the time, was very different. The effort was the subject of significant criticism and contentious debate from diverse segments. Andrew Beckett writes, in the Guardian, on this frequent mistaken comparison::"In truth, boycotts are blunt weapons. Even the most apparently straightforward and justified ones, on closer inspection, have their controversies and injustices."
Other, such as Hillary and Stephen Rose in "Nature", make the comparison and argue for an academic boycott of Israel based on a belief that the academic boycott of South Africa was effective in ending apartheid. George Fink responds to this claim in a letter to "Nature"::"The assertion [...] that the boycott of South Africa by the world's academic communities 'was instrumental in ending apartheid in South Africa' is a deception.
:Apartheid was actually terminated by two pivotal and interrelated political events. First, the United States Congress, on 29 September 1986, overrode President Reagan's veto and imposed strict economic sanctions on South Africa. Second, F. W. de Klerk was elected president of South Africa on 14 September 1989. Two months later (16 November 1989), de Klerk announced the scrapping of the
Separate Amenities Act , then, on 11 February 1990, freed Nelson Mandela from prison. The rest is historical detail."ee also
*
History of South Africa in the apartheid era
*Anti-Apartheid Movement
*Disinvestment from South Africa
*Sanctions against Iranian scientists References
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