National Association of Scholars

National Association of Scholars
National Association of Scholars
Original NAS.gif
Founder(s) Stephen Balch, Herbert London
Founded 1987
Location Princeton, New Jersey
Motto For Reasoned Scholarship in a Free Society.
Website www.nas.org

The National Association of Scholars (NAS) is a non-profit organization in the United States that opposes multiculturalism and affirmative action and seeks to counter what it considers a "liberal bias" in academia.[1][2] The NAS describes itself as "an independent membership association of academics working to foster intellectual freedom and to sustain the tradition of reasoned scholarship and civil debate in America’s colleges and universities."[3]

Contents

History

Originally called the Campus Coalition for Democracy, the National Association of Scholars was founded in 1987 by Herbert London and Stephen Balch[3][4] with the goal of preserving the "Western intellectual heritage".[5] The group's stance on race and gender issues has been controversial; in 1990, the opening of an NAS chapter at Duke University led to a major dispute in which 93 faculty members wrote a letter criticizing NAS for its stance on multiculturalism.[6]

Fundng

NAS has been funded extensively by politically conservative foundations, including the Sarah Scaife Foundation, the John M. Olin Foundation, the Bradley Foundation, the Castle Rock Foundation, and the Smith Richardson Foundation.[7][8] Prominent board members of NAS have included conservatives Jeane Kirkpatrick and Irving Kristol.

Issues and journal

The National Association of Scholars opposes campus speech codes, which they argue violate the First Amendment. The NAS strongly objects to racial and gender preferences in college admissions and hiring, but states that it does not oppose all forms of affirmative action. Time Magazine called NAS the "faculty opposition to the excesses of multiculturalism."[9] The NAS describes its main work as the defense of "the core values of liberal higher education."[3] William A. Donohue, former NAS board member[10] and leader of the politically conservative Catholic League,[11] writes in American Conservatism: an Encyclopedia that the NAS wishes "to foster renewed respect for the proposition that rational discourse and scholarship are the basis of academic life" and to emphasize "the Western commitment to freedom and democracy."[12] These contentions are questioned by Jacob Weisberg, who states that NAS is "prone to conflating its admirable ideals with far less compelling political prejudices."[13]

The NAS' quarterly journal, Academic Questions, publishes articles and interviews on higher education, with a focus on the perceived excesses of political correctness in academia. In a review in The Times Literary Supplement, Jonathan Rauch noted the journal's ideological tone, writing, "Though written mainly by scholars, it is a missionary journal, not a scholarly one." Rauch concluded: "If at times hectoring, Academic Questions is that rare and useful thing among journals—a live wire."[1]

Membership, affiliates, leadership

NAS membership is open to all. This is a change as of October 2009. Before that NAS restricted membership to academics. NAS "now encourage anyone who agrees with the principles we espouse to join." NAS does distinguish between academic and public members. Membership includes a subscription to Academic Questions.[14] According to the association, it has affiliates in 46 states, as well as in Guam and Canada.[15]

Stephen Balch, founding president of the National Association of Scholars, receives the National Humanities Medal from President George W. Bush

Stephen Balch, a former associate professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, is the co-founder of the organization and chairman of the board of directors. Balch received a 2007 National Humanities Medal from U.S. President George W. Bush for his "leadership and advocacy upholding the noblest traditions in higher education. His work on behalf of reasoned scholarship in a free society has made him a leading champion of excellence and reform at our nation's universities."[16]

Peter Wood is the president.[17] The advisory board of the NAS has included several notable individuals. Jeane Kirkpatrick was a United States ambassador and adviser to Ronald Reagan. Chester Finn helped to form the conservative movement's education policies.[18] Irving Kristol, founder of the neoconservative movement, "characterized multiculturalism as 'a desperate strategy for coping with the educational deficiencies and associated social pathologies of young blacks.'"[18]

Controversy

Since its founding, the NAS has been in the midst of numerous controversies in higher education. It was an early critic of political correctness, engaged the American Association of University Professors over some of its policies, and complained to the secretary of the U.S. Department of Education, Lamar Alexander, who ruled that the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools eliminate its diversity standard. NAS's stands have led critics to label NAS "conservative",[19] a "group of reactionary scholars" and "a leading vehicle for the conservative attack on multiculturalism and political correctness".[20]

The NAS denies that the views it advocates are conservative. Instead, the NAS describes itself as "liberal," referring to classical liberalism. NAS executive director Peter Wood writes: "Both Left and the Right produce their share of intellectual obtuseness. The NAS is not a partner with either. We are not a political organization, but a body of scholars who hope to sustain a vision of the university as a fundamentally good institution that deserves to be sustained."[21]

Chapters of the NAS have been involved in a number of campus controversies related to affirmative action and multicultural studies programs. According to People for the American Way, NAS faculty at the University of Texas, Austin blocked the inclusion of civil rights readings in an English course; the readings had been proposed to address concerns about racial and sexual harassment on campus.[8] In 1990, the NAS had placed an advertisement in the Daily Texan (the University of Texas student newspaper), calling for the rejection of a proposed multiculturalism curriculum that was to be implemented into an English course at the University of Texas.[22] Simultaneously, the NAS encouraged a successful campaign to defund the university's Chicano newspaper.[8]

In 1990, a Duke University chapter of the NAS was formed by James David Barber, a political science professor and former chair of the U.S. section of Amnesty International. The new chapter provoked "a sometimes bitter debate" about the NAS stances on race and gender, and on whether academic freedom should extend to what NAS critics viewed as intolerance. Postmodernist speech-restriction-code supporter Stanley Fish, chairman of the English department at Duke and a long-time target of Barber's criticism, wrote a letter to the University's student newspaper, The Chronicle, saying that NAS "is widely known to be racist, sexist and homophobic." In an interview with the Durham Morning Herald, Barber called Fish "an embarrassment to this university for his gross insult to this organization." In response to the NAS chapter formation, a larger group of faculty formed "Duke Faculty for Academic Tolerance". The dispute was covered by the New York Times.[6]

Also in 1990, the Harvard University community debated the presence of the NAS. Writing in The Harvard Crimson, Martin L. Kilson, Jr. acknowledges some "overzealous behavior by supporters of ethnic studies and women studies" but states that the NAS was an "overkill neoconservative response." In Kilson's view, NAS had succumbed to "anxiety and maybe phobia" of left-wing elements espousing multicultural causes. He asks, "why shouldn't persons on our campuses go to great lengths to avoid the tag "racist"? Or the tags "homophobic," "sexist," "anti-Asian," etc.?"[23]

In 2001, it was reported that the Colorado Commission on Higher Education had paid the National Association of Scholars $25,000 to generate a report on several Colorado universities with education programs. The NAS report criticized diversity curricula and recommended that the University of Colorado's education program be suspended and new admissions to other programs be halted.[18] University of Colorado, Boulder dean William Stanley resigned in protest of what he called "teacher-bashing" by the NAS,[24] while regent Bob Sievers deplored "anti-teaching, anti-C.U./Boulder, anti-women and anti-minority bias." Questions were also raised regarding why money was paid to a "right-wing" organization like the NAS[24] rather than to a group "with credentials in teacher education."[18]

In September 2008, the New York Times published an article entitled "Conservatives Try New Tack on Campuses," which described the NAS as intensively and successfully lobbying for a section of the Higher Education Act of 2008 which provides federal funding for programs which emphasize "traditional American history, free institutions or Western civilization". The article makes the case that NAS and allied organizations are seeking to advance conservative causes by attaching conditions to university donations.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b The Times Literary Supplement, Jonathan Rauch, "Academic Questions" [1]
  2. ^ National Association of Scholars From the website of People for the American Way. Accessed July 17, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c Who We Are, from the National Association of Scholars website.
  4. ^ Wilson, John (1996). The Myth of Political Correctness. Duke University Press. ISBN 0822317133. 
  5. ^ a b Patricia Cohen (September 21, 2008). "Conservatives Try New Tack on Campuses". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/22/education/22conservative.html. Retrieved September 22, 2008. 
  6. ^ a b Campus Life: Duke Scholars' Group, Accused of Bias, Divides Faculty. Published in the New York Times on October 21, 1990; accessed June 4, 2008.
  7. ^ ""Anti-PC activists trade war stories at Harvard", Anthony Flint, Boston Globe, 12 April 1994, p.22
  8. ^ a b c "Buying a Movement: Conservative University Programs and Academic Associations" (PDF). People for the American Way. https://www.pfaw.org/sites/default/files/buyingamovement.pdf. Retrieved May 7, 2010. 
  9. ^ Olson, John. "Academics in Opposition." Time, 1 April, 1991
  10. ^ "National Association of Scholars: Contact Us". 2009. http://www.nas.org/contact.cfm. Retrieved 2009-11-23. 
  11. ^ Catholic League website
  12. ^ Donahue, William A. "National Association of Scholars," in American Conservatism: an Encyclopedia. Wilmington: ISI Books, 2006.
  13. ^ Weisberg, Jacob. "NAS - Who are These Guys Anyway?" Lingua Franca Apr. 1991: 34-39
  14. ^ NAS Who We Are
  15. ^ NAS Affiliates
  16. ^ National Endowment for the Humanities Medal Announcement
  17. ^ NAS Contact Us
  18. ^ a b c d Bob Campbell, Colorado Springs Independent, "State Education Commission Coming Under Fire," 24 May 2001 Accessed 04 June 2008.
  19. ^ Chicago Cultural Studies Group, "Critical Multiculturalism," in Multiculturalism: A Critical Reader (David Theo Goldberg, ed.) Blackwell Publishers, 1994
  20. ^ Feldstein, Richard. Political Correctness: A Response From the Cultural Left. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997.
  21. ^ Wood, Peter. "Media Opacity." 4 December 2007. http://www.nas.org/polArticles.cfm?Doc_Id=110
  22. ^ Getman, Julius. In the Company of Scholars: the Struggle for the Soul of Higher Education. Austin: University of Texas P, 1992.
  23. ^ Martin L. Kilson, The Harvard Crimson, "Keep the National Association of Scholars Away From Harvard" 11 December 1990. Accessed 04 June 2008.
  24. ^ a b Dave Curtin, Denver Post, "CU dean resigns, rips state," 08 April 2001. Accessed 4 June 2008

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