// you're reading...

Uncategorized

BREAKING NEWS: Massad Gets Tenure!

Although the word is not “official,” I am officially posting on this.

In the shadow of last year’s protracted, over-exposed, and very public (and successful) tenure bid by his Columbia University colleague, Anthropology Professor Nadia Abu El-Hajj, Modern Arab Politics Professor Joseph Massad manages to quietly escape such a frenzy-filled reception:

THE CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION
April 8, 2009
Controversial Tenure Case at Columbia U. May Be Over

It isn’t official, but word around Columbia University is that the controversial Palestinian scholar Joseph A. Massad will be awarded tenure.

Sudipta Kaviraj, chairman of the department of Middle East and Asian languages and cultures, said in a telephone interview this afternoon that the proceedings involving Mr. Massad’s tenure case have not formally concluded. “When it is finished, the university writes to the department and writes to the individual concerned,” he said. “That hasn’t happened yet.”

But another professor in the department who did not want to be named said word on the grapevine within the department is that Mr. Massad will be awarded tenure. The professor said that the provost allows the department chairman to alert a tenure candidate about the outcome of the decision prior to the final letters that are sent. That is apparently what has happened.

Mr. Massad is on leave this academic year and did not respond to an e-mail message asking for comment.

Mr. Massad’s tenure case has been a highly unusual one. He was first granted a one-year extension on his tenure bid in the spring of 2007. A year later, the university’s provost recommended that Mr. Massad be denied tenure after an ad hoc committee that considered his tenure bid split 3 to 2 in his favor.

But after senior professors in Mr. Massad’s department complained to the provost, he apparently decided to reconsider the case and give the professor the unusual opportunity of a second chance at tenure. That second review has been occurring over the current academic year.

Mr. Massad’s career at Columbia, which began in 1999, has been rocky. Much of his troubles date from controversy over a 2005 documentary film, Columbia Unbecoming, produced by an off-campus group called the David Project Center for Jewish Leadership. The film accused Mr. Massad of rebuffing pro-Israeli students and made him a target of pro-Israel groups.

Mr. Massad has denied that any of the incidents depicted in the film took place, but a faculty committee appointed by Columbia to investigate the accusations found that he had acted inappropriately in a couple of incidents. —Robin Wilson

[Tarboush Tip: Minotaur]

Did you like this? Share it:

Related posts:

  1. Breaking F@#kin’ News: Bush And Co. Lied
  2. Short Documentary on Academic Freedom
  3. Breaking: Professor Khalidi Goes Out for Groceries
  4. BREAKING NEWS: Bono is a Liberal
  5. The Case For Norman Finkelstein
Filed Under  ,

Discussion

No comments yet.

Post a comment

Connect With Us Ya Hmeer!

resume resume

Recent Posts

3la Aysh Sufayt?: A Sovereign Palestinian State
January 30, 2012
By Husam
Let’s Kill Obama! (And the Subsequent Fracas)
January 27, 2012
By Yazan
Saleh Gone: What Next?
January 26, 2012
By Abubakr
Kuwaiti Youth Are Stuffed Goats
January 25, 2012
By Guest
Logik Politik
January 24, 2012
By Guest
Inshallah, Kashmir
January 19, 2012
By Sana
The Hypocrisy on Palestine
January 19, 2012
By Guest
Let’s Talk About Sectarianism, Baby
January 18, 2012
By Abubakr
Diary of a Bad Man
January 17, 2012
By Nabeelah
In Defense of Resistance: Hezbollah and the Syrian Intifada
January 16, 2012
By Yazan
America’s Most Lethal Navy SEAL Sniper
January 12, 2012
By OmarS
Israel: South Sudan’s Big Brother
January 11, 2012
By Nabeelah
Not Just Decor: The Struggle for Real Women’s Rights in Lebanon
January 10, 2012
By Guest
Don’t Ignore Ron Paul
January 9, 2012
By OmarS
History of US Intervention in Iran
January 6, 2012
By Sana