After months of heated controversy over the war in Gaza, Harvard University has adopted a policy of “institutional neutrality,” asserting that the core function of the university is to protect free speech and debate and to advance learning, not to take sides. Other universities are considering following Harvard’s lead.
I personally think that this is the proper path for institutions of higher education. They should be places where debates about public policy may occur without intimidation by students or wealthy donors.
After months of controversies tied to the Israel-Hamas war, Harvard University said Tuesday that its administration would no longer issue official statements about public matters that “do not directly affect the university’s core function.”
The school made the announcement more than a month after an Institutional Voice Working Group was established to consider the matter. It come as conversations around the country debate whether to issue public statements on divisive issues of the day.
“The integrity and credibility of the institution are compromised when the university speaks officially on matters outside its institutional area of expertise,” the working group said in a report, which was accepted by Harvard’s administration….
Harvard was engulfed last fall in controversies over what to say about the Israel-Hamas war. A growing chorus of professors and administrators proposed a simple solution: silence.
At Harvard and other universities, momentum has been building for “institutional neutrality,” the principle that university leaders should refrain from taking positions on weighty social and political matters. That idea was, until recently, a fairly obscure concept debated within the academy.
But after the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel plunged many American universities into turmoil, and thrust their leaders into debates over an intractable conflict, schools from Cambridge to California are considering adopting institutional neutrality as a matter of official policy.
Interim Harvard president Alan Garber assembled the working group to study the matter. Columbia’s University Senate recently adopted institutional neutrality in a unanimous vote. Faculty groups at the University of Pennsylvaniaand Yale University are pushing their leaders to do the same.
Proponents argue that adopting neutrality will make universities more governable and protect their mission of fostering open inquiry. Universities, they say, should be forums for debates, not participants in them. But critics say the idea of a neutral university is a chimera. Endowments invest in fossil fuel stocks and some schools accept donations from representatives of autocratic regimes. Neutrality, critics say, is a way to deflect scrutiny and avoid taking morally correct but inconvenient stands…
However, in its report, the Harvard working group said that “the university is not a neutral institution.”
“It values open inquiry, expertise, and diverse points of view, for these are the means through which it pursues truth,” read the report. “The policy of speaking officially only on matters directly related to the university’s core function, not beyond, serves those values.”

I would think that whom a university accepts donations, particularly large ones, from *is* directly related to its core function.
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Ticking all the right word boxes might impress the gold medalists in the universe of semantic gymnastics, but it doesn’t make “neutrality” a function of score-based-degree institutions. Sort and separate institutions can’t be neutral as their controllers aren’t neutral. Institutional opinions or ideas, in the strict sense of the word, prejudices, aren’t neutral. Strategic messaging may build social license, but it doesn’t hide the death of innocents.
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Agree this is the proper path.
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From Dante’s Divine Comedy Part I, the Inferno. “The hottest places in Hell are reserved for those who in times of great Moral Crisis, maintain their neutrality.”
Let us not forget those “Brilliant” Ivy League students and their equality “Brilliant” professors who have drawn a False Equivalence between Hamas’ invasion of Israel, knowingly, deliberately, willfully, killing, raping, beheading and torturing innocent Israeli men women and children with their vow to wipe Israel off the face of the Earth with Israel’s response to destroy all the terrorists.
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Can an institution maintain neutrality in matters of public disagreement? Are all matters of public disagreement to be approached with neutrality? There were people who, in 1940, advocated in favor of fascism. Universities tended to be hotbeds of opposition to fascism. Was that wrongheaded? Universities are places where academic freedom pushes against single-minded views of the world. Is this not a natural bias against a world without thought?
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You didn’t get the memo, I guess. Chat Generative Pretrained-Transformer is going to do our thinking (and creating) for us. Maybe it can even feed directly into Elon’s chip in our heads.
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There’s a good essay in the NY Times today explaining the reasoning of the Harvard committee.
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One way Harvard could become more neutral would be to invest its endowment in publicly-traded funds, particularly ones that mirror the economy as a whole. They could say, “We have 60% of the endowment in MegaBroker stock index fund and 40% in MegaBroker bond index fund. No more private equity deals.”
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I don’t see how that solves the problem. Index funds may include problematic investments in their attempt to model the market.
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Not many universities can identify individual investments. Most are in mutual funds.
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From Harvard Magazine:
“Harvard’s endowment is overwhelmingly focused on equities. In fiscal 2021, 81 percent of HMC assets were equity-linked: 14 percent in public securities, 33 percent hedge funds, and 34 percent private equities.”
Harvard has since stopped reporting its holdings by percent.
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Mutual funds can be equity or bond funds.
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Yes, mutual funds can be bonds or equities. Here’s the opaque part to which I object:33 percent hedge funds, and 34 percent private equities
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When you put your money into a mutual fund, you don’t get to choose which equities to keep or sell.
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Exactly.
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Typical cojonesless administrative decision. They know who butters their bread and cain’t be having any less bread.
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I don’t think it’s a spineless decision. I think it’s wise. Why should the university take a stand on political issues? Its role is to promote debate and knowledge.
Many of the kids protesting couldn’t find Gaza on a map. If the university takes a position, it squelches legitimate debate. Dissidents are silenced.
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Ever since the teachers strike in January of 2019, I have thought that my union, UTLA, is by far the strongest and most ethical teachers union in the nation. Lower class sizes, less unnecessary testing, better compensation. Period. Lately, however, I fear that UTLA has lost its focus, dabbling in national and international politics which have nothing at all to do with the core functions of a teachers union. I wish we would adopt a policy similar to that of Harvard. The LAUSD School Board should do the same. They too have lost their way quite a bit. Let’s all do our jobs as efficiently and effectively as possible.
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LCT, agree about losing sight of your core function. You are at your best when you are focused on what you have been educated for. Unions and universities should not be taking sides in contentious debates. Unions should fight for their students and members. Universities should teach students how to debate. How to prepare. How to listen. How to engage in a civil manner.
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Institutional neutrality is, I think, the correct policy on issues not directly related to the education mission of a university. There are a variety of opinions, for example, about the proper terms for a cease fire in Gaza. Should the terms be that no hostages need be returned, all live hostages be returned, all dead hostages returned, some live hostages and some dead? Individual faculty and students can, and should, voice their thoughts on what are the right terms, but the institution should remain neutral.
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In a similar vein, excellent news today that Harvard’s Arts and Sciences division has joined MIT in doing away with mandatory “diversity statements” in faculty hiring. This is a good trend and I hope it continues.
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