Harvard’s Board Takes Us for Fools
Last week, Harvard President Claudine Gay was accused of multiple instances of plagiarism. Three authors have said that they believe she plagiarized their work. News of this scandal followed Gayโs appalling testimony on antisemitism before Congress, a performance that sparked condemnation even from the Biden White House. But these events have exposed in turn a set of actors even more comically dangerous to the Harvard brand than Gay herself: the Fellows of Harvard College, the universityโs governing board.
Rather than request President Gayโs resignation, Harvardโs board has chosen to cover for her with dissimulations that only a Harvard graduate could expect the public to swallow.
On Dec. 12, the Fellows revealed that they had convened a panel of โdistinguished political scientistsโ to review the allegations against Gay, which they had first learned of in October. Of course, Harvard has standing faculty committees to investigate accusations of plagiarism, but the board apparently chose to use these unnamed panelists to examine the charges instead. The board made no mention of Harvardโs Committee on Professional Conduct, which ordinarily investigates claims of faculty misconduct according to the universityโs detailed policy. That policy has no provision for makeshift investigations overseen by the Harvard board.
Rather than clearing President Gay, even this hand-picked panel found some of the allegations credible. The board admits that her published writings contain instances of โinadequate citation.โ That term is important because Harvardโs own plagiarism policy states, โWhen you fail to cite your sources, or when you cite them inadequately, you are plagiarizing, which is taken extremely seriously at Harvard.โ The board therefore confesses that President Gay committed plagiarism multiple times based on the universityโs own definition.
Then comes the sleight of hand. The board asserts that, despite the plagiarism, there was โno violation of Harvardโs standards for research misconduct.โ But in fact, Harvardโs policy on research misconduct defines the transgression this way: โfabrication, falsification, or plagiarism in proposing, performing, or reviewing research, or in reporting research results.โ So, plagiarism is research misconduct, and the board admits that Gay committed plagiarism as Harvard defines it. Yet the board somehow maintains that Gay did not commit research misconduct. If anyone still teaches logic at Harvard, the Harvard board should consider sitting in on a course.
The board goes on to reassure us that President Gay โis proactively requesting four corrections in two articles to insert citations and quotation marks that were omitted.โ After she was caught, President Gay โproactivelyโ corrected her decades-old articles, like an art thief โproactivelyโ returns a stolen Monet discovered in his attic. Pressing its luck, the board also reduces plagiarism to a punctuation mistake: โquotation marks โฆ were omitted.โ Note the use of the passive voice: so very clever, these Fellows of Harvard College!
The board left out some material facts. When presented by the New York Post with evidence of Gayโs plagiarism on Oct. 24, Harvard did not simply initiate an investigation. Instead, the university sicced a famed defamation lawyer on the Postโs reporter, only to confess last week that at least some of the potential examples did constitute plagiarism as Harvard defines it. We doubt that Harvard provided white-shoe defamation attorneys to the 27 students it kicked out for plagiarism last year. In saner times, a university president credibly accused of plagiarism would have received not a super-lawyer, but a severance package. This is not your grandfatherโs Harvard.
Anyone who has followed past plagiarism scandals knows that this story is probably not over. The Fellows of Harvard College should keep their pencils sharpened and their minds nimble โ they will likely need to draft more creative excuses for their president in the days ahead.
This article was originally published by RealClearPolitics and made available via RealClearWire.