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Harvardās Double Standard on the Role of Student Organizations

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On Friday afternoon, Harvard College Dean Rakesh Kurana sent a to Harvard President Drew Faust, recommending that Harvard take aggressive steps to deter students from joining off-campus, single-sex organizations. That same afternoon, President Faust sent a agreeing with the proposal. The exchange had the appearance of a meticulously choreographed, formalistic ritual of a sort usually reserved for meetings of heads of state.
As we explained on Friday, Harvard seeks to deter students from joining these unrecognized organizations by prohibiting their members from holding leadership positions on (single-sex!) athletics teams and recognized student organizations, and from receiving Deanās recommendation letters for Rhodes and Marshall scholarships.
Harvardās rationale relied fairly heavily on the notion that student and alumni organizationsāwhich operate independently of Harvardārepresent the university:
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS will decide for themselves whether to engage with these organizations, as members or otherwise. But just as students have choice, so too the College must determine for itself the structure of activities that it funds or endorses (including through fellowship recommendations from the dean), or that otherwise occur under its auspices. Captains of intercollegiate sports teams and leaders of organizations funded, sponsored, or recognized by Harvard College in a very real sense represent the College.
Thatās a curious statement, for two reasons.
First, Harvardās targets are organizations that ²¹°ł±š²Ōāt funded or endorsed by Harvardāthe organizations it supposedly āendorsesā are merely the tools Harvard is using to pressure outside groups. Few people, outside of current Harvard students, would recognize whether the vice-president of the Harvard Undergraduate Beekeepers club (to pick one organization entirely at random) is also a member of a secretive āfinal club.ā (Remember, the clubsā membership is a secret. Unless Harvard is going to establish some kind of analog to the House Un-American Activities Committee to pair with its blacklist, the enforcement of this will be even more arbitrary than the usual run of university procedures.)
Second, Harvardās claim that it can dictate the values of its student organization leaders because they ārepresentā Harvard departs from the commonly understood wisdom that student organizations do not represent the universityāa point Harvard itself has made frequently. Indeed, the university, in addition to from purporting to represent Harvard, has repeatedly distanced itself from controversial student organizations and publications when faced with controversies concerning their activities:
One: In to the H-Bomb, a student-run magazine featuring ānude pictures of Harvard undergraduates and articles about sexual issuesā:
Associate Dean of the College Judith H. Kidd said officially approved organizations do not necessarily represent the views of the College.
Two: In to the āHarvard College Munch,ā a student organization āto discuss issues and topics relating to kinky sexā:
Harvard spokesman Jeff Neal said the school recognizes more than 400 independent student organizations, and the groups are required to submit an organizational constitution and agree to the schoolās nondiscrimination and anti-hazing policies. Then, their fate is decided by a committee composed of students and administrators.
āThe college does not endorse the views or activities of any independent student organization,ā Neal told FoxNews.com. āRather, it ensures that independent student organizations remain in compliance with all applicable provisions of the Handbook for Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS.ā
Three: Harvard spokesman Jeff Neal in response to a āChristian journal run by Harvard College undergraduates [which] published an essay on its blog by an anonymous Jewish convert to Christianity who said that Jews killed Jesus and therefore deserve Godās wrathā:
Harvard spokesman Jeff Neal said the college does not endorse the views of any of its more than 400 student organizations. āAs an institution of higher education, free expression is one of our fundamental principles,ā he said in a statement.
The Harvard Ichthus, like many other student groups, received funding from the undergraduate student government.
Six Six Six Four: Harvard made clear that it was not affiliated with Satan, distancing itself, in a now-deleted , from a planned by students:
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS at Harvard Extension School, like students at colleges across the nation, organize and operate a number of independent student organizations, representing a wide range of student interests.
Harvard Extension School does not endorse the views or activities of any independent student organization. But we do support the rights of our students and faculty to speak and assemble freely.
So, which is it? Do student leaders ārepresentā Harvard only when participating in same-sex organizations, but not when holding a Satanic black mass or publishing nude photos of themselves? To be sure, Harvardās previous disinclination in these matters to interfere with student speech and affiliation was welcome. But saying it must act now because students ārepresentā Harvard, when it previously declined to act because students »å¾±»å²Ōāt ārepresentā Harvard, is laughable.
Colleges cannot credibly claim to value free expression and association when it suits their messaging, then abandon that commitment when it conflicts with administratorsā goals. Doing so betrays that commitment as shallow, if it exists at all.
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