4-16-14 UMN Faculty Statement on the Visit of Dr. Condoleezza Rice |
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From ipetitions | Original Article On April 17, 2014, former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will visit the University of Minnesota to give the Distinguished Carlson Lecture, an annual activity of the Humphrey School of Public Affairs, endowed by a private gift from the Carlson Foundation. This year, the lecture has an additional significance, as it is part of the series of events entitled, "Keeping Faith with a Legacy of Justice," sponsored by the Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the American Civil Rights Act of 1964. As the flagship speaker for the main event of the series, Dr. Rice is explicitly being honored as a civil rights leader and being brought in to speak about civil rights given her purported leadership and expertise on American civil rights.
We, the undersigned University of Minnesota faculty, are grateful to the Carlson Family for their past and current generosity. The Carlson family and Foundation have supported a variety of important projects on campus over the years, and have greatly enriched our environment.
We have no objection to Dr. Rice visiting our campus. Indeed, as strong advocates of the right to free speech, we welcome anyone - including Dr. Rice - into our community to engage in an open exchange of ideas.
In that very spirit of free expression, however, and in our commitment to the principles of truth and the common good that are inscribed above the entrance to Northrop Auditorium where Dr. Rice will speak, we object to the circumstances of this particular visit. While Dr. Rice is an accomplished African-American woman, the advancement of civil rights - the theme of this year's lecture series - is not central to her legacy. Indeed, as a leading national security official during the entirety of the Bush administration, she bears responsibility for substantial violations of civil liberties and civil rights that were carried out in the name of prosecuting the War on Terror.
Dr. Rice is welcome to speak on the University of Minnesota campus, but let's not ignore her record. As National Security Adviser in the critical period of 2001-05, Dr. Rice played a central role in the design and implementation of the Administration's policies, which legitimized the use of torture by redefining it to include only practices so severe as to induce organ failure. By this logic, "enhanced interrogation techniques" that had previously been defined as torture, such as waterboarding, were no longer defined as such and became standard practice in the War on Terror. Since the end of her tenure, Dr. Rice has defended the use of torture and has not publicly distanced herself from these decisions that violated both US and international law and resulted in severe violations of human rights.
Dr. Rice also supported the Administration's policy of rendition, whereby individuals were abducted and delivered by US authorities to "black sites" in third countries such as Egypt and Syria, countries that were known to subject prisoners to torture. This practice violated due process, since these individuals were detained without being given the opportunity to defend themselves. They were effectively found guilty without trial. And they were tortured. Since some detainees died while in custody, this practice was, in many circumstances, tantamount to authorizing extrajudicial execution.
Given the focus on free speech, Dr. Rice's role in formulating and implementing a policy of ideological exclusion is also relevant. The State Department she directed from 2005 until 2009 denied visas to numerous foreign scholars that the Administration deemed to be ideologically problematic, preventing scholars from assuming prestigious posts at American universities and from attending scholarly conferences.
Finally, we want to note that there are also human rights implications to the much reported high speaking fee being paid to Dr. Rice. Not only is this oversized payment a dubious priority in a time of economic hardship and austerity, it is also inconsistent with the civil rights movement's emphasis on economic justice.
We are proud to work at the University of Minnesota which, among its many strengths, is a hub for human rights education, and which hosts many important projects and discussions designed to promote human rights and human dignity. We, of course, support free speech as one of the core human rights that sustain an atmosphere of academic freedom and a democratic society. Accountability, in this case, must be central to that open debate.
Signed by: 1. Barbara A. Frey, Director, Human Rights Program, Institute for Global Studies 2. Alejandro Baer, Associate Professor of Sociology, Stephen C. Feinstein Chair in Holocaust & Genocide Studies 3. Stephen Meili, Professor, University of Minnesota Law School 4. Fionnuala Ni Aolain, Professor, Law School 5. David Weissbrodt, Professor, Law 6. Kathryn Sikkink, Emeritus Professor, Political Science 7. James Ron, Associate Professor and Stassen Chair of International Affairs, Department of Political Science and Humphrey School of Public Affairs 8. Greta Friedemann-Sánchez, Ph.D., Associate Professor, International Development Practice and Public Policy, Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs 9. Lisa Hilbink, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science 10. Ana Forcinito, Professor, Spanish and Portuguese Studies 11. Joachim Savelsberg, Professor, Department of Sociology 12. Leigh A Payne, Senior Researcher in Human Rights 13. Kristi Rudelius-Palmer, Human Rights Center Co-Director/Adjunct Professor, Human Rights Center/Law School 14. Samuel L. Myers, Jr., Director and Roy Wilkins Professor of Human Relations and Social Justice, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 15. Joe Soss, Cowles Professor for the Study of Public Service, Hubert H. Humphrey School of Public Affairs 16. Teri L. Caraway, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science 17. Ron Krebs, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science 18. Joseph E. Schwartzberg, Distinguished International Professor Emeritus 19. Ron Aminzade, Professor, Department of Sociology 20. Allen Isaacman, Regents Professor, Department of History 21. Naomi Scheman; Professor; Departments of Philosophy and Gender and Women, & Sexuality Studies 22. David Pellow, Professor, Department of Sociology 23. JB Shank, Associate Professor, Department of History and Director of the Center for Early Modern History 24. Riv-Ellen Prell, Professor, American Studies 25. Michael Goldman, Professor, Department of Sociology and Global Studies 26. Vinay Gidwani, Associate Professor, Deparment of Geography and Institute for Global Studies 27. Jigna Desai; Chair and Associate Professor; Department of Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies and Program of Asian and American Studies 28. Paula Rabinowitz; Professor; Department of English, Language/Literature 29. Sarah Holtman, Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy 30. Bianet Castellanos, Associate Professor, American Studies 31. John Wallace, Professor, Department of Philosophy 32. Stuart McLean, Associate Professor, Institute for Global Studies and Department of Anthropology 33. Ana Paula Ferreira, Professor, Portuguese Studies 34. Thomas Pepper, Associate Professor, Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature 35. Kathy Quick, Assistant Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 36. Ajay Skaria, Associate Professor, Department of History and Institute for Global Studies 37. Geoffrey Hellman, Professor, Department of Philosophy 38. William Messing, Professor, Department of Mathematics 39. Jack Zipes, Professor Emeritus, Department of German, Scandinavian and Dutch 40. Christophe Wall-Romana, Associate Professor, Department of French and Italian 41. Rick McCormick; Professor; Department of German, Scandinavian & Dutch 42. Tracey Deutsch, Associate Professor, Department of History 43. Martha Tappen, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 44. MJ Maynes, Professor, Department of History 45. Lisa Sun-Hee Park, Professor, Departments of Sociology and Asian American Studies 46. Michelle M Hamilton, Associate Professor, Spanish & Portuguese 47. Joan DeJaeghere; Associate Professor; Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy and Development 48. Amy Kaminsky, Professor, Department of Gender, Women & Sexuality Studies and Institute for Global Studies 49. Phillip K. Peterson, M.D., Professor Emeritus of Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School 50. Cawo Abdi, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology 51. Kirsten Fischer, Associate Professor, Department of History 52. Elizabeth Heger Boyle, Professor, Department of Sociology 53. Rachel Schurman, Professor, Department of Sociology and Global Studies 54. Karen-Sue Taussig, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 55. Karen Ho, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 56. Carl Elliott, Professor, Center for Bioethics 57. Diane Katsiaficas, Professor, Department of Art 58. Francis Harvey; Associate Professor; Department of Geography, Environment, Society 59. Tony C. Brown; Associate Professor; Department of English, Language and Literature 60. Stephen Gudeman, Professor, Department of Anthropology 61. William O. Beeman, Professor, Department of Anthropology 62. Keya Ganguly, Professor, Department of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature 63. Jennifer L. Pierce, Professor, American Studies 64. Teresa Gowan, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology 65. Frances Vavrus; Professor; Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development 66. Kathleen E. Hull, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology 67. Joe Owens, Professor, Department of Philosophy 68. Annie Hill; Assistant Professor; Rhetoric, Department of Communication Studies 69. Gloria Raheja, Professor, Institute for Global Studies and Department of Anthrolopogy 70. Kevin P. Murphy, Associate Professor, Department of History 71. Deborah Levison, Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 72. Guy Gibbon, Professor Emeritus, Department of Anthropology 73. Sarah Parkinson, Assistant Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 74. Amy Sheldon, Professor, Communication Studies 75. Leigh Turner, Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics, School of Public Health, & College of Pharmacy 76. Elaine Tyler May, Regents Professor, Departments of American Studies and History 77. Lary May, Distinguished Teaching Professor, Emeritus, Departments of American Studies and History 78. Ascan Koerner, Associate Professor, Department of Communication Studies 79. Yuichiro Onishi, Associate Professor, African American & African Studies & Asian American Studies 80. David Valentine, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 81. Enid Logan, Associate Professor, Sociology 82. Qadri Ismail, Associate Professor, English 83. Lisa Albrecht, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Social Justice, Social Work, CEHD 84. Steven Sperber, Professor, Mathematics 85. Gopalan Nadathur, Professor, Computer Science and Engineering 86. Roderick A. Ferguson, Professor, American Studies 87. Ameeta Kelekar, Associate Professor, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology 88. Roy T Cook, Associate Professor, Philosophy 89. M.J.Fitzgerald, Associate Professor, English Department and Creative Writing Program 90. Rose Brewer, Professor, African American & African Studies 91. George Henderson, Associate Professor, Department of Geography, Environment, and Society 92. Maria Damon, Professor, English 93. Jani Scandura, Associate Professor, English 94. Michael Gaudio, Associate Professor, Art History 95. Jennifer Gunn, Associate Professor and Chair, Program in the History of Medicine 96. Steven F. Ostrow, Professor and Chair, Art History 97. Laurie Ouellette, Associate Professor, Communication Studies 98. Susan Craddock, Professor, Institute for Global Studies and Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies 99. Keitha Lucas Hamann, Associate Professor, School of Music 100. Doug Hartmann, Professor, Sociology 101. Sonja Kuftinec, Professor, Theater Arts and Dance 102. Dominic Taylor, Associate Professor, Theatre Arts & Dance 103. Sumanth Gopinath, Associate Professor of Music Theory, School of Music 104. Michelle Mason, Associate Professor, Philosophy 105. Sara M. Evans, Regents Professor Emerita, History 106. Timothy Brennan, Professor, Cultural Studies & Comparative Literature; and English 107. James Dillon, Professor, School of Music 108. Klaas van der Sanden, Program Director, Institute for Global Studies 109. Keith Mayes, Associate Professor & Chair, African American & African Studies 110. David Samuels, Distinguished McKnight University Professor, Political Science 111. Bruce Braun; Professor; Department of Geography, Environment and Society 112. Hoon Song, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 113. Juliette Cherbuliez, Associate Professor, French and Italian 114. Paul Garrett, Professor of Mathematics, School of Mathematics 115. Julia W Robinson, Professor, School of Architecture 116. Erin Kelly, Professor, Sociology 117. Hiromi Mizuno, Associate Professor, Department of History 118. Eva von Dassow, Associate Professor, Classical and Near Eastern Studies 119. Ruth-Ellen B. Joeres, Professor Emerita of German , Department of German, Scandinavian, and Dutch 120. David Chang, Associate Professor, Department of History 121. Jimmy Patiño, Assistant Professor, Department of Chicano & Latino Studies 122. Lois Cucullu, Associate Professor, English 123. Howard Lavine, Arleen Carlson Professor of Political Science and Psychology, Political Science 124. Bill Gleason, Associate Professor (retired), Laboratory Medicine & Pathology 125. Patrick J. McNamara, Associate Professor, Department of History 126. Joshua Page, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology 127. Anne Lazaraton, Associate Professor, Writing Studies 128. Mark Pedelty, Associate Professor, Communication Studies 129. Gilbert Tostevin, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 130. Subir K. Banerjee, CSE Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Institute for Rock Magnetism, School of Earth Sciences 131. Jean M Langford, Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology 132. Irene Duranczyk, Associate Professor, Postsecondary Teaching and Learning, College of Education and Human Development 133. david karjanen, Assistant Professor, American Studies 134. Marc Hirschmann, Professor, Earth Sciences 135. Charlotte Melin; Professor; German, Scandinavian and Dutch 136. Hyman Berman, Professor Emeritus, History 137. Na'im Madyun, Associate Dean Undergraduate and Diversity Programs, CEHD 138. Nancy Luxon, Assistant Professor, Political Science 139. Maria Brewer, Associate Professor, Department of French and Italian 140. Diane Willow, Associate Professor, Art / Gender, Women, & Sexuality Studies 141. Raúl Marrero-Fente, Professor, Spanish and Law 142. Lorena Munoz; Assistant Professor; Department of Geography, Environment, Society 143. Thomas Wolfe, Associate Professor, Department of History 144. Matthias Rothe; Assistant Professor; German, Scandinavian & Durch 145. Siobhan Craig, Associate Professor, Department of English 146. Monika Zagar, Professor of Scandinavian, GSD 147. Leslie Morris; Associate Professor; Department of German, Scandinavian and Dutch 148. Dr. Hilde Hoffmann; Visiting Professor; German, Scandinavian and Dutch 149. Jeffrey Broadbent, Professor, Sociology 150. Elizabeth Belfiore, Professor Emerita, Classical and Near Eastern Studies 151. Andrew D. Cohen, Professor Emeritus, Second Language Studies 152. August H. Nimtz, Professor, Political Science/African American and African Studies 153. Mary Vavrus, Associate Professor , Communication Studies Department 154. Catherine Guisan, Visiting Assistant Professor , Political Science 155. Hernan Vidal, Professor emeritus, Department of Spanish and Portuguese Studies 156. Charles J. Sugnet, Associate Professor, Department of English 157. Jennifer Karns Alexander; Associate Professor; History of Science, Technology, and Medicine, and Department of Mechanical Engineering 158. Ragui Assaad, Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 159. Jodi Sandfort, Associate Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 160. Arun Saldanha; Associate Professor; Geography,Environment,Society 161. Katherine Fennelly, Professor emerita, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 162. Diana Burgess, Associate Professor, Medicine 163. Angelica Afanador-Pujol, Assistant Professor, Art History 164. David L. Fox, Associate Professor, Department of Earth Sciences 165. Patricia Lorcin, Professor, Department of History 166. Jaime Hanneken, Associate Professor, Spanish and Portuguese Studies 167. Carol Chomsky, Professor, Law School 168. John Song, Associate Professor, Center for Bioethics Department of Medicine 169. Betsy J. Kerr, Associate Professor, Department of French and Italian 170. Melissa Partin, Associate Professor, Department of Medicine 171. George Spangler; Professor Emeritus; Dept. of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology 172. Carol A. Klee, Professor and Chair, Spanish and Portuguese Studies 173. Jane Blocker, Professor, Art History 174. Eileen Sivert, Associate Professor, French and Italian 175. Zenzele Isoke; Assistant Professor; Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies 176. Melissa Stone, Professor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs 177. Daniel Schroeter, Professor, Department of History 178. Michelle Phelps, Assistant Professor, Sociology 179. Karen Miksch, Associate Professor of Higher Education and Law, Postsecondary Teaching and Learning 180. Joan Liaschenko, Professor, Center for Bioethics and School of Nursing 181. Michael B. Kac, Professor, Department of Philosophy and Program in Linguistics 182. Richard McGehee, Professor, School of Mathematics 183. Dennis Hejhal, Professor, School of Mathematics 184. Joseph Gerteis, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology 185. Emi Ito, Professor, Earth Sciences 186. Donald Kahn, Professor (retired), School of Mathematics 187. Joan C. Tronto, Professor, Department of Political Science 188. John Baxter, Professor, Mathematics 189. Joel Eisinger, Associate Professor, Art History, UMM 190. Abigail Neely; Assistant Professor; Department of Geography, Environment and Society 191. Clint Carroll, Assistant Professor, American Indian Studies 192. Margaret Werry, Associate Professor, Theatre Arts and Dance 193.Eric Van Wyk, Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science and Engineering 194.Arthur Walzer, Professor, Communication Studies 195.Mats Heimdahl, Professor, Computer Science and Engineering 196. Ronald Walter Greene, Professor, Communication Studies 197. Jennifer Marshall, Associate Professor, Department of Art History 198. Jonathan Sachs, Associate Professor, Biomedical Engineering 199. Richard Lee, Professor, Psychology 200. Ananya Chatterjea, Professor, Theater Arts and Dance and Director, Dance ProgramTheater Arts and Dance 201. Charles Doss, Assistant Professor, Statistics 202. Rodney G. Loper, Professor Emeritus, Counseling Services and Psychology 203. Brenda Child, Associate Professor, Department of American Studies 204.Joan A Smith, Professor, Department of Theater Arts and Dance 205. Elaine Tarone, Professor, CLA and CEHD 206. Frank C Miller, Professor Emeritus, Department of Anthropology 207. Paul Porter, Professor, Department of Agronomy and Plant Genetics 208. Donald Wyse, Professor, Agronomy and Plant 209.Patricia Walker, Associate Professor, Department of Medicine 210. Constance Sullivan, Associate Professor Emerita, Spanish and Portuguese Studies 211. Cindy Garcia, Assistant Professor, Theater Arts and Dance 212. Jason McGrath, Associate Professor, Asian Languages and Literatures 213. Ernest Davenport, Associate Professor, Educational Psychology Departmental affiliation is provided for identification purposes only and is not intended to reflect the opinion of the University of Minnesota. Note: We ask that only UMN faculty sign. Thank you. For a list of signatures as of 5pm on Wednesday, April 16th, please click here and scroll down to the end of the letter. The letter was sent to President Kaler and Dean Schwartz with the first 213 signatures listed below. We have left the petition open so that faculty may continue to sign.
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