Category Archives: Ethics

Havard backed in firing bipolar worker

Inside Higher Ed reports:

The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit against Harvard University over its firing in 2003 of Michael Mammone, who was an assistant in a university museum and who has bipolar disorder. Mammone charged that the university violated state anti-bias laws that protect the employment rights of people with disabilities, including mental disorders. But the court found that Mammone’s behavior that led to his dismissal — including maintaining a Web site criticizing the university, working on that Web site during work hours, having loud and animated discussions at work about the Web site, and refusing meetings with supervisors and ignoring their warnings — meant that he failed to demonstrate that the was a “qualified employee” under the statute. One judge dissented, saying that the court did not give enough weight to the years in which Mammone worked without incident.

The Chronicle: Massachusetts High Court Finds for Harvard in Firing of Mentally Ill Man

Disappointing disability-rights advocates, the highest court of Massachusetts ruled on Friday that Harvard University had the right to fire a mentally ill employee for what the court called “egregious workplace misconduct.”

CU report on Ward Churchill delayed

Inside Higher Ed: A faculty panel investigating allegations of research misconduct by Ward Churchill said last week that it needed more time and would try to have a report done by May 9. The University of Colorado at Boulder panel was created following an uproar over statements about 9/11 by Churchill, who teaches ethnic studies. The investigation is not over those statements, but over allegations concerning Churchill’s scholarship that surfaced after the controversy broke. Churchill has denied any wrongdoing. The panel said that it needed more time because of the number of allegations and because some committee members quit and needed to be replaced.

U. of Saskatchewan Fires Tenured Professor Accused of Maligning Colleagues on RateMyProfessors.com

The Chronicle: U. of Saskatchewan Fires Tenured Professor Accused of Maligning Colleagues on RateMyProfessors.com

The University of Saskatchewan has fired a tenured professor after determining that he had anonymously posted disparaging messages about fellow faculty members on RateMyProfessors.com.

Survey: Sexual Harassment Pervades College Campuses and Injures Men as Well as Wome

The Chronicle: Sexual Harassment Pervades College Campuses and Injures Men as Well as Wome

Nearly two-thirds of male and female college students have been sexually harassed in college, according to survey results released on Tuesday by the American Association of University Women’s Educational Foundation.

Of the 2,036 students surveyed, 62 percent said they had experienced sexual harassment, which the survey defined as unwanted and unwelcome sexual behavior that interferes with one’s life. Almost one-third of the students said they had encountered physical harassment, such as being touched, grabbed, or pinched in a sexual way, according to a report based on the survey.

Evidence of Pentagon Surveillance

Inside Higher Ed: Evidence of Pentagon surveillance

College officials are expressing concerns about a 400-page Department of Defense document that characterizes “threats” stemming from protests and demonstrations at institutions of higher education nationwide as either “credible or “not credible.” The document, which includes information on multiple protests at college campuses over the last year, has led to questions from officials at the monitored institutions over how the Pentagon has pursued its information.

New Jersey Governor Sets Strict New Ethics Rule to Avoid Conflicts of Interest for College Leaders

The Chronicle: New Jersey Governor Sets Strict New Ethics Rule to Avoid Conflicts of Interest for College Leaders

Presidents of New Jersey’s public colleges and members of their governing boards have 30 days to sever business relationships with the institutions or resign, under an executive order issued this week by Richard J. Codey, the state’s acting governor.

The governor’s action, announced on Wednesday, followed concerns about possible conflicts of interest on the Board of Trustees of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey that were raised by two accrediting bodies, the American Medical Association and the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.