Category Archives: International

Canadian academics urge consideration of boycott of Israeli universities

CAUT Boycott: Consider boycott of Israeli universities

Britain’s University and College Union has moved to implement an academic boycott of Israeli universities, and some university presidents in this country have already issued pronouncements condemning such a boycott. However, this is a serious issue deserving proper consideration by the academic community.

It is important to remember, first of all, that boycotts are not about individuals. They are tactics used to change a specific policy — in this case, the illegal military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and the stifling consequences the occupation has had on Palestinians, including academics and students.

Since 2000, Israeli policies have prevented countless Palestinians from exercising their right to education. Travel restrictions make it impossible to attend a university unless you live within walking distance. Roadblocks, checkpoints and curfews disrupt schedules and make it impossible to plan the academic year and hold examinations.

Now foreign aid is being withheld and tax revenues as well since Israel refuses to transfer taxes collected from occupied Palestinians. As a result, universities cannot get funds and many students cannot afford tuition fees. Professors have gone unpaid for many months and Israel is denying visas to foreign academics who wish to teach in Palestinian universities, including Palestinians who have lived and taught there for many years, but who hold a foreign passport.

Yet in 40 years of occupation, no Israeli university has stood up for the rights of Palestinian universities.

Some of the undersigned participated in a boycott of Soviet universities designed to pressure the Soviet government into allowing Jewish academics to emigrate to Israel and other countries. Now a boycott of Israeli universities to pressure the Israeli government into allowing the Palestinians their right to education needs to be considered.

Raja T. Abboud
Professor Emeritus
University of British Columbia
The Lung Centre
Vancouver General Hospital

Richard Bevis
Emeritus Professor of English
University of British Columbia

I. Ekeland
Canada Research Chair in Mathematical Economics
University of British Columbia

V. Raoul
Professor Emerita
French & Women’s Studies
University of British Columbia

E. Wayne Ross
Curriculum Studies
University of British Columbia

E. Seaton
Graduate Studies
York University

R. Ward
Electrical & Computer Engineering
University of British Columbia

Opinion: Academics Who Want to Promote Peace Have Better Options Than Boycotts

The Chronicle: OPINION: DIALOGUE, NOT BOYCOTTS

Through a program of dialogue, Palestinian and Israeli teachers change their understanding of each other.

British Union’s Leaders Call Off Debates Over Academic Boycott of Israeli Universities

The Chronicle: British Union’s Leaders Call Off Debates Over Academic Boycott of Israeli Universities

The British faculty union that fanned international outrage earlier this year when delegates to its annual meeting voted to have the membership consider an academic boycott of Israeli universities sought to put an end to the controversy by announcing on Friday that it had received legal advice saying that such a move would be unlawful and could not be implemented.

The University and College Union, which has 120,000 members and is Britain’s main faculty union, did not publish the full text of the advice it had received but included excerpts in a statement posted online. “The legal advice makes it clear that making a call to boycott Israeli institutions would run a serious risk of infringing discrimination legislation,” the union’s statement said.

British Union Drops Boycott Call

Inside Higher Ed: British Union Drops Boycott Call

For several years now, British faculty unions have been voting in various ways to encourage members to boycott Israeli academics and universities — and ignoring anti-boycott pleas and resolutions and requests from scholarly societies, university presidents and academics from Britain, the United States and in some cases the Palestinian Authority. On Friday, the union announced an abrupt reversal: Based on legal advice, calls for the boycott will be dropped.

A statement from the University and College Union said that after the latest vote by union leaders, in May, the group’s leaders sought legal advice to make sure the organization wouldn’t face court challenges. The lawyers said that pushing for a boycott would be illegal. “It would be beyond the union’s powers and unlawful for the union, directly or indirectly, to call for, or to implement, a boycott by the union and its members of any kind of Israeli universities and other academic institutions; and that the use of union funds directly or indirectly to further such a boycott would also be unlawful,” the lawyers said. As a result, the union is calling off plans for a tour of local chapters to encourage them to support a boycott.

SCHOOL YEAR IN BULGARIA BEGINS WITH TEACHERS’ PROTESTS

Sofia Echo: SCHOOL YEAR IN BULGARIA BEGINS WITH TEACHERS’ PROTESTS

First school day in Bulgaria started with protests of 81 per cent of the teachers in the country, according to data of the united strike committee of the teachers.

Education Minister Daniel Vulchev said that he had no doubts that the school principals followed his order to begin the school year on time. On September 14, Vulcev said that sanctions would be imposed on principals who fail to obey his order.

Union For Striking Zimbabwe Teachers Rejects 91% Wage Increase

VOA News: Union For Striking Zimbabwe Teachers Rejects 91% Wage Increase

The Progressive Teachers Union of Zimbabwe said Thursday that the government offered striking teachers a 91% salary increase, adding Z$2.6 million to the present basic wage of Z$2.9 million for a total of Z$5.5 million dollars – but the union said it rejected the “pathetic” offer, demanding a monthly minimum of Z$15 million.

British Faculty Union Cites Legal Advice in Abandoning Proposed Boycott of Israel

The Chronicle News Blog: British Faculty Union Cites Legal Advice in Abandoning Proposed Boycott of Israel

The British faculty union that stoked international controversy this year when delegates to its annual meeting voted to consider whether to boycott Israeli universities and refuse to cooperate with Israeli academics has now told its members that such a move would be illegal and could not be carried out.

UK: First profit-making company to award degrees

The Guardian: First profit-making company to award degrees

A private for-profit company has for the first time been given the go-ahead to offer its own degrees, in a landmark decision which could open the door to increased privatisation of higher education.

BPP College of Professional Studies is a private institution with colleges in London, Leeds and Manchester and is owned by BPP Holdings plc – which is listed on the stock exchange.

Shares in the plc went up 13% overnight following the announcement yesterday that the privy council had approved the application to allow the college to award its own degrees.

ACLU Again Sues the Government Over a Foreign Scholar’s Exclusion From the U.S.

The Chronicle: ACLU Again Sues the Government Over a Foreign Scholar’s Exclusion From the U.S.

The American Civil Liberties Union sued the federal government on Tuesday to try to force it to allow a senior South African academic to enter the United States.

The scholar, Adam Habib, has been barred from entering since last fall, when he was detained at a New York airport and deported after arriving for a series of academic meetings. This past spring he applied for a new visa, in hope of attending the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association in New York, in August, where he had been invited to speak on a presidential panel. U.S. consular authorities never responded to his request.

Music Scholar Barred From U.S., but No One Will Tell Her Why

The New York Times: Music Scholar Barred From U.S., but No One Will Tell Her Why

Nalini Ghuman, an up-and-coming musicologist and expert on the British composer Edward Elgar, was stopped at the San Francisco airport in August last year and, without explanation, told that she was no longer allowed to enter the United States.

Israel: Teachers union may defy order, strike in first week of school year

Haaretz: Teachers union may defy order, strike in first week of school year

The Association of Secondary School Teachers may violate an injunction forbidding them to strike during the first week of the new school year, according to people who attended an emergency meeting called by the union yesterday.

Scholar accused of spying leaves Iran; another stays in jail

International Herald Tribune: Scholar accused of spying leaves Iran; another stays in jail

An Iranian-American scholar accused of spying who had been imprisoned for more than three months left Iran on Sunday, but another scholar remains jailed on similar charges.

The scholar, Haleh Esfandiari, 67, director of the Middle East Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, left Iran late on Sunday after authorities returned her passport. It was taken away in January, when she came to Iran to visit her ailing mother. She was jailed in May on security-related charges and was released last month.

The other scholar who was arrested with Esfandiari in May, Kian Tajbakhsh, an urban planner with ties to the Open Society Institute of the Soros Foundation, was still being held despite promises of his release to his family.

Freed Scholar Recounts Time In Iranian Prison

Washington Post: Freed Scholar Recounts Time In Iranian Prison

Seeing the sliver of a new moon from her cell became the marker of Haleh Esfandiari’s solitary confinement, thousands of miles from home and facing an uncertain future.

Serbia: Teachers announce warning strike

B92 News Society Education: Teachers announce warning strike

BELGRADE — The Serbian Union of Education Workers has said it would hold a one-day warning strike on September 5.

Union representatives say the one-day warning strike aims at reminding the government of the three wage demands of education workers that, in their words, must be met.

Iran forces lecturers to disclose all foreign trips

The Guardian: Iran forces lecturers to disclose all foreign trips

University lecturers in Iran are to be forced to tell security authorities of all foreign trips in advance in a move aimed at preventing them from being recruited as western spies.

150 Injured in Bangladeshi Students’ Protests of Military Presence at U. of Dhaka

The Chronicle: 150 Injured in Bangladeshi Students’ Protests of Military Presence at U. of Dhaka

At least 150 university students in and around Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka, have been injured in violent clashes with the police since Monday, when protests began against the presence of the country’s army on the campus of the University of Dhaka.

According to A.F.M. Yusuf Haider, the university’s acting vice chancellor, the clashes began after students at the University of Dhaka demanded an apology from soldiers who got into an argument with and assaulted some students on Monday evening.

Oh, Canada

Inside Higher Ed: Oh, Canada

The United States is part of the Americas. Hence not all Americans are citizens of the United States — and it is a sign of imperial hubris to treat those terms as synonyms.

Or so runs a bit of routine language-policing, as practiced by many well-intentioned people. By many well-intentioned Americans, one should say – meaning “citizens of the United States.” I know because I used to be one of them. Then, a few years ago, while on vacation in Canada, my wife and I had an odd conversation with the woman who ran the place we were staying. When she used the expression “you Americans,” our half-baked cosmopolitan reflexes kicked in.

“You’re an American, too,” we insisted. “Canada is part of America!”

Tehran Will Put Iranian-American Scholar on Trial, Her Lawyer Says

AP: Tehran Will Put Iranian-American Scholar on Trial, Her Lawyer Says

An Iranian-American scholar released after months of imprisonment in Iran has no passport and cannot leave the country where she still faces charges of endangering national security, her lawyer said Wednesday.

UK: Teachers strike over extra hours

Enfield Independent: Teachers strike over extra hours

LESSONS were cancelled at Edmonton County School last week as teachers went on strike over a rise in the amount of time they must spend in the classroom.

Around 50 teachers, who are members of the National Union of Teachers (NUT), stood outside the educational establishment, in Great Cambridge Road, on Wednesday morning.

South Africa: Second strike in Western Cape ‘unavoidable’

Mail & Guardian: Second strike in Western Cape ‘unavoidable’
This week union federation Cosatu declared a dispute with government, setting the stage for a second public service strike in the Western Cape less than three weeks after the end of the biggest civil servant strike since 1994.