22 August 2024

The historian Joan Scott of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton explains the history of the AAUP’s changing policy on academic boycott and her own evolving view on it, reproduced here from the AAUP’s Journal of Academic Freedom.

Changing My Mind about the Boycott

Joan W. Scott
In 2006, I was one of the organizers of an aborted AAUP conference on academic boycotts. The
point was to open a conversation about the utility—past and present—of such political actions,
to understand what was actually involved in the choice of that strategy, to conduct a
conversation in a setting above the fray (in this instance at the Rockefeller Conference Center in
Bellagio, Italy), and to learn what we could from the various points of view we hoped to
represent at the conference. Idealistically, we imagined the conference to be an exercise in
academic freedom, the fulfillment of the best of AAUP principles. In fact, our experience was
anything but the fulfillment of AAUP ideals. From the outset, defenders of right-wing Israeli
politics—with Professor Gerald Steinberg of Bar-Ilan University in the lead—sought to prevent
the meeting, arguing, in the name of academic freedom, that “illegitimate” (that is, Palestinian)
voices would be included in the group. Soon the then-leaders of the AAUP—Cary Nelson and
Jane Buck—joined the opposition, notifying the funders of the conference that it did not have
official AAUP approval. (They did not notify the conference organizers of these actions.) At that
point the conference was canceled. The full story, as well as some of the papers that would have
been presented at the conference, was published in a special report in Academe (September–
October 2006).
Those of us who organized the conference were not promoting academic boycotts; we were
simply interested in debating the issue in order to better understand and evaluate the strategy
of the boycott. In fact, at the time, I agreed with the prevailing view at the AAUP that academic
boycotts were contrary to principles of open exchange protected by academic freedom. I have
now reconsidered that view. Even at the time, in the heat of the controversy about our
conference, it began to seem to me that inflexible adherence to a principle did not make sense
without consideration of the political contexts within which one wanted to apply it. Indeed,
given the vagueness of the principle of academic freedom, its many different uses and
applications, knowing how to apply it required understanding the different functions it served
in practice. If the conference was meant to achieve that understanding, it was thwarted, for we
had clearly walked into a political minefield—the so-called defenders of Israel were going to
prevent us from exercising our rights to free speech (to discussion and debate), just as they were
preventing their critics within Israel from doing the same by threatening and firing those who
represented dissenting views. What did it mean, I wondered, to oppose the boycott campaign in
the name of Israeli academic freedom when the Israeli state regularly denied academic freedom
to critics of the state, the occupation, or, indeed, of Zionism, and when the blacklisting of the
state’s critics is the regular tool of state authorities against Israel’s own academic institutions?
If anything, the power of the Right and the oppression of Palestinians have increased since
2006—even the supposed “weakening” of the Netanyahu government has taken place through
the strengthening of right-wing parties. The country that claims to be the only democracy in the
Middle East is putting in place a brutal apartheid system; its politicians are talking openly about
the irrelevance of Arab Israeli votes in elections and developing new methods for testing Arab
Israeli loyalty to the Jewish state. Israel’s legal system rests on the inequality of Jewish and non-Jewish citizens; its children are regularly taught that Arab lives are worth less than Jewish lives;
its military interferes with Palestinians’ access to university education, freedom of assembly,
and the right to free speech; and its Council of Higher Education, now an arm of the Likud
Party, has elevated a religious college in the settlements to the status of a university, accredited
a neoconservative think tank to grant BA degrees to students, and conducted inquisitions
among university faculty, seeking to harass, demote, or fire dissidents—that is, to silence their
speech. The hypocrisy of those who consider these to be democratic practices needs to be
exposed. An academic and cultural boycott seems to me to be the way to do this.
Such a boycott refuses to accept the facade of democracy Israel wants to present to the
world. It is not a boycott of individuals on the basis of their national citizenship. Quite the
contrary—it is an institutional boycott, aimed at those cultural and educational institutions that
consistently fail to oppose the occupation and the unequal treatment of non-Jewish citizens. It
demands evidence that these institutions provide academic freedom to Arabs as well as Jews,
Palestinians as well as Israelis, within the borders of Israel, the occupied West Bank, and Gaza,
and support it for Arabs and Jews equally. It says that, in the face of an apartheid that violates
both the principles and practices of equality and freedom for all, a principled opposition to
boycotts as punitive or unfair makes no sense. In fact, such an opposition only helps perpetuate
the system. The boycott is a strategic way of exposing the unprincipled and undemocratic
behavior of Israeli state institutions; its aim might be characterized as “saving Israel from itself.”
The American academy has been particularly complicit in perpetuating the fiction of Israeli
democracy—its leaders seek to protect Israel from its critics, even as they also seek to protect
themselves from the wrath of the organized lobbies who speak on behalf of the current Israeli
regime and its policy of establishing academic outposts in illegal settlements. This, it seems to
me, is ill advised, since so much of Israeli politics right now is at odds with the best values of
the American educational system. Paradoxically, it is because we believe so strongly in
principles of academic freedom that a strategic boycott of the state that so abuses it makes sense
right now.

AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 4 Volume Four

Joan W. Scott is Harold F. Linder Professor in the School of Social Science at the Institute for
Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. Her most recent book is The Fantasy of Feminist History
(2011)