Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Campus activism: potential blowback on the Republicans?

I started college in the late 1970s.  Since "the 1960s" were really from about 1964-1974, there was still a lot of recognition of that period in Ann Arbor.  

As is my want, when I was in college I became interested in how colleges work and I read a lot of the literature of the time about "college student development" especially William Perry's Forms of Intellectual and Ethical Development in the College Years: A Scheme (book, a webpage).  Others writing along these lines included Lawrence Kohlberg and Carol Gilligan.

Plus I read works like Kirkpatrick Sale's SDS and Todd Gitlin's The Whole World is Watching about "the movement."  Me and some others even brought Gitlin to campus to speak.

Perry discusses how students start at the dualism point--yes or no--move to an everything's relative position, and then, ideally, to what he called "commitment in relativism" in that you use relativistic thinking to come to a position.

Probably most university presidents aren't familiar with this literature, because I was shocked when the Penn, Harvard, and MIT presidents were grilled before Congress last November about pro-Palestinian activism on their campuses, which was pitched as anti-Semitism, that the presidents didn't reference this work ("Lawmakers question Harvard, Penn and MIT presidents on antisemitism," "The anti-college subtext to the right-wing response to Gaza protests," Washington Post). Two of the presidents ended up resigning.

Interestingly, now that I think about it, from Perry's perspective, Republicans in Congress reason dualistically, which isn't particularly sophisticated.

Roger Martin, former dean of the Rothman School of Business at the University of Toronto has a related concept called integrative thinking where people simultaneously consider multiple ideas that conflict and come up with a way to resolve them. 

In any case, you can be pro-Jew/pro-Israel, which I am, because my father was Jewish, and I remember books in our house about the Arab-Israel conflict, while recognizing at the same time that the Palestinians have a co-equal right to live, and the way that Israel treats the Palestinians is abominable.  

Sure Hamas was terrible and should be condemned, but Hamas, in effect, was created (blowback) by Israel's treatment of Palestinians.  And you can be against killing of all sorts.  I think Hamas was wrong.  And so is Israel, which has killed over 30,000 people in its war in the Gaza Strip.

I do think universities have the obligation to better integrate understanding college student development and working with students to move along the ladder of cognitive and ethical development.  Obviously that's not happening in a purposeful way in most universities, even "the best" ones.

The Columbia University president came up before Congress last week and she completely capitulated, and later asked the NYPD to remove a protest sit in student camp out staking a pro-Palestinian position ("Columbia Students Arrested Over Campus Rally May Face Other Consequences," New York Times).  

And USC told the Palestinian valedictorian that she wouldn't be able to give the traditional speech at commencement ("USC got it wrong in canceling valedictorian’s speech. Here’s what the school should do now," Los Angeles Times).  

Police officers stand near tents erected by pro-Palestinian protesters on the South Lawn at Columbia University in New York, on Thursday. C.S. MUNCY/The New York Times/Redux

Last week students were removed from an encampment at in California.

FWIW, I participated in a sit in back in the day about disinvesting from South Africa.  I'm sure the administration was indulging us, but they didn't call the police on us even though we remained in the Regents board room overnight.  

Contrast that to now sadly, as UM is considering much harsher policies ("Some concerned University of Michigan proposed policy on protests could quell free speech efforts," CBS).

I don't think students are wrong to support Palestinians.  Wrong is violence against Jews or destruction of property.  Reporting by the student newspaper at Columbia found that most of the incidents were off-campus by people not related to the university ("Rabbi advises Jewish students to ‘return home as soon as possible’ following reports of ‘extreme antisemitism’ on and around campus," Columbia Spectator).

In response to the Columbia action, students at Yale and others created tent camps supporting Columbia students and the Palestinian cause ("Students at more universities announce solidarity rallies after 108 pro-Palestinian activists are arrested at Columbia," CNN, "UM students set up encampment on Diag protesting war in Gaza," Michigan Public Radio).

Photo: A.J. Jones, Michigan Public Radio.

I wonder if this will wildcat across the country, the same way demonstrations did after students were killed at Kent State (and Jackson State) in 1970 when they were protesting against the Vietnam War  ("It began with defiance at Columbia. Now students nationwide are upping their Gaza war protests," AP).

There are protests at University of Washington today ("Student walkout: Updates as WA students protest Israel-Hamas war," Seattle Times).

However, protest has become much less effective in changing society over the years.  I don't know why exactly.  Some argue it's co-opted by elites and there's definitely truth to that.  And corporate interests are much more organized and active in protecting their interests ("The small business tyrant has a favorite political party," New York Times), "The UAW’s Chattanooga Victory: Score One for the North in Our Endless Civil War," American Prospect).

-- "How violent protest can backfire," Stanford News
-- "The end of protesting," Comment
-- "Can protests lead to meaningful changes in government policy, particularly around economic redistribution?," Brookings
-- "Do Protests Even Work," The Atlantic

Some is because back in the day there were just a few communications sources and they had disproportionate power and authority and most people read or watched them.  

But with cable television and social media and the decline of newspapers and traditional television news, effect can be dissipated, even though social media had some success wrt both Tahrir Square in Cairo and Chiapas state in Mexico.  Not to mention the development of a fabulist conservative media ecosystem.

Still, the Republican/conservative response to the Israel-Palestinian issue may in fact spark a new activism. And revive the strength of protest movements.

Although the conservatives have some advantage in that the winter term is almost over, and students would tend to go back home for the summer.

=====

FWIW, a lot of my peers at the time thought that activism in the 1960s had failed.  I used to respond, "the US got out of Vietnam, what do you mean?"  But definitely after the US took out the troops, the big reason or impetus for activism faded.  But at least when I was at school there were two more waves, Divestment from South Africa and then US involvement in Central America, specifically El Salvador.

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13 Comments:

At 6:55 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://prospect.org/power/2024-04-23-this-modern-world/

 
At 8:51 AM, Anonymous charlie said...

https://www.politico.com/newsletters/playbook/2024/04/24/why-bidens-blase-about-campus-turmoil-00154044?cid=hptb_primary_0


It does strike me as a very generational moment, although I'd say more Berkeley Free Speech Movement rather than Kent State.

The big difference is you don't have the draft to pump up the volume, and that in the end Gen Z era and like Gen Xers - not enough of them to force the country to move.

And like the US intervention in central america protests, not going to move the dial on anything.

Interesting cite on learnings there -- again I think one aspect that is happening is for a large variety of learning that integrative thinking is not happening on college campuses anymore.

If I read the VP bios correctly she claimed to spend much of her tie at Howard being a professional protester. Would be interesting to get her perspective. Her husband is definitely in the camp that this is anti-jewish activism.

There's a book in my list on why are "people power' movements fizzling out in this era. I'd say the social media powered protests work well is scale but not in depth. Not just thinking of the US here -- yellow jaunt, BLM, arab spring, etc.

Lack of concrete policy doesn't help. Kissinger, is his last speech before he died said after the Hamas attacks it's time to recognize the two state solution is dead. Getting to a two state solution doesn't solve the problem.



 
At 4:38 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

As always, very good points. I'd like that cite when you get around to it.

2. WRT depth and breadth, I think that's an issue. That's been a criticism for awhile, called "slacktivism."

But I think you hit on two more important points. No draft, no threat of the US participating in a war, so people are a lot less motivated. Although Trump's presidency did motivate a lot of people at least for awhile.

Second point, not enough people, not enough mass.

Plus, the issue of lack of concentrated media.

Plus, I just don't think the elites give a f* so much any more, are inured to criticism, don't feel threatened by the mass, exist within their own information ecosystems, aren't gonna get voted out if they don't respond (e.g., my Congresswoman never answers queries, like her predecessor that she worked for, at least from Salt Lake City, which is divvied up in all four Congressional districts so there isn't the possibility of sending a Democrat to Congress from Utah).

By contrast, the Republican Congressman in my district when I was in high school went to festivals and stuff. I went up to him and asked for a subscription to the Congressional Record and he got it done... I doubt that'd happen today.

George Floyd broke through that for awhile. E.g., Trump allegedly in the Bunker, wanting troops.

But it didn't last.

There's a book I am not sure I want to read, How Elites at the social justice movement, by Franklin Foer, about elite capture of the movement.

https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/How-Elites-Ate-the-Social-Justice-Movement/Fredrik-deBoer/9781668016015

But that always happens with the social movement process, it starts at the grassroots and needs elites to make the changes, such as at the Congressional or Presidential level (e.g., getting out of Vietnam, the Civil Rights Act, woman's rights which we're seeing how that's going, etc.). Like how the environmental movement went from Earth Day to Body Shop.

=======
In my resource list, I meant to reference Sarah Soule

https://www.amazon.com/Primer-Social-Movements-Contemporary-Societies/dp/0393978451

and in the list of "other books" there's _The Diffusion of Social Movements: Actors, Mechanisms, and Political Effects_

which I should try to track down. It seems to make these kinds of points.

The issue then becomes how to stitch up all the singular locations/actions into a movement that isn't ephemeral.

Basically the thing I learned at CSPI, but I never coined it the Overton Window, it's similar but different, is what I call the Issue Continuum.

You have your issue and then there are points all along it in terms of policy proscriptions

Far left, most conservative, far right most progressive.

You can't get the most progressive position, but if some groups stake themselves there and have good messaging (e.g. unlike Defund the Police or Abolish ICE which were stupid, weren't going to happen, and there were better ways to articulate better change points) you get way more movement to that position than you would otherwise.

Related is my line: if you ask for nothing that's what you get. If you ask for the world, you don't get it, but you get a lot more than nothing.

Substantive social change takes decades. I use smoking as an example. Surgeon General's report 1964, Second Hand Smoke reports started in 1972, with definitive evidence in 1986, higher taxes, restriction on ads (this aren't in order), etc., and there is still a significant proportion of people who smoke, but in all that time incidence is only down 1/3 (from 45% of the population to 30%, vaping doesn't help).

 
At 4:40 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://www.inquirer.com/columnists/attytood/kent-state-anniversary-college-debt-student-loans-20220503.html

1960s protests convinced politicians to make college expensive. America is still paying the price

A distillation of elites, but especially Republicans, of being leery of college educated people.

E.g., Reagan became governor as a response to protest at Berkeley and the seeming failure to respond with sticks.

 
At 5:47 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

I guess the thing that Overton captured that I didn't is quantum jumps in willingness for change, like gay marriage--eg in the beginning Obama was against and later in favor. Although now we're experiencing a major counterattack wrt LGBTQ issues and women's rights.

Otoh, wrt Overton he just coined a term for social movements or policy movements moving to an inflection point, from one phase to another.

 
At 10:16 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/student-palestine-protesters-school-their-universities.html

Student Protesters Are Schooling Their Universities

If the students posed no real threat, then Columbia was merely repressing pro-Palestinian speech and action. Difficult or controversial moments tend to reveal an institution’s true commitments, and universities like Columbia, it seems, don’t value critical thought as much as they value business as usual.

... Administrators should perhaps use the intellectual skills that students themselves are expected to learn. It is patently unreasonable to equate all anti-Zionist political activity with antisemitism when many of the demonstrators are Jewish themselves. Any protest can attract bad actors, but that’s no reason to stop organizing. Members of Columbia University Apartheid Divest and Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine released a statement saying they “reject any form of hate or bigotry,” including antisemitism. Shafik’s escalation further puts students at risk — not just from arrest but from retaliation. Over the past several days, figures like Jonathan Greenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League and Senator Tom Cotton have called for the National Guard to step in — never mind the Kent State massacre of antiwar protesters in 1970. Others make comparisons to the white-nationalist march in Charlottesville in 2017, where a neo-Nazi murdered a progressive counterprotester with his car.

As long as students remain peaceful, they are guilty of one thing only: embarrassing their universities by applying their education to the real world. At Columbia, they are not calling for violence but for the university to divest from companies that profit from Israeli occupation. And they have good reason to do so. As pundits wring their hands over the protests, students remind onlookers that the real horror is not on the American campus but in Gaza. Israel’s catastrophic assault has killed tens of thousands of Palestinians, maybe more as the effects of famine set in. As of January, most victims in Gaza were women and children, according to the United Nations. Israel has destroyed hospitals and killed dozens of journalists, academics, and aid workers. On Monday, the Gaza Civil Defense reported finding a mass grave holding nearly 300 bodies at the Nasser Medical Complex. Anyone who thinks deeply about the world should form an opinion on Gaza, and that’s precisely what these students have done. Columbia and Barnard may wish the protesters had arrived at different opinions, but they can’t — or at least shouldn’t — deny that students are exercising critical thought, even empathy.

 
At 10:18 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Speaking of the South African divestment movement.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2024/apr/24/university-fossil-fuel-divestment-student-protests-israel-gaza

How divestment became a ‘clarion call’ in anti-fossil fuel and pro-ceasefire protests

 
At 10:21 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Robert Reich a professor at Berkeley, former government official, makes points similar to the New York Magazine about the role of the university when it comes to inquiry, disagreement and cognitive development.

Protesting against slaughter – as students in the US are doing – isn’t antisemitism

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/23/israel-gaza-campus-protests

====
Similarly,

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/apr/19/nemat-minouche-shafik-columbia-gaza-war

What I would have told Congress if I were in Columbia president Shafik’s shoes

 
At 10:25 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/04/23/metro/mit-emerson-second-day-encampments

MIT, Emerson students maintain second-day tent encampments protesting Israel-Hamas war

====
Students rally, call for American University to divest from Israel

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2024/04/23/protests-american-university-israel-gaza-college-campus/

 
At 1:00 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

hmm, charlie did you delete a comment? I hadn't gotten to the cites...

 
At 1:03 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

George Washington University in DC

Hundreds of students, advocates converge at GW University to support Gaza

https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/04/25/college-protests-george-washington-university/

D.C. police rejected GWU’s plea to sweep out university protesters

https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/04/26/dc-police-george-washington-university-protests/

GW University suspends students involved in protest encampments

https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2024/04/26/gwu-protests-encampment-pro-palestinian/

 
At 1:07 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

Emerson College and Northeastern University, Boston

Pro-Palestinian encampment grows at Northeastern, continues at MIT

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/04/26/metro/northeastern-pro-palestinan-encampment

Boston police forcibly remove pro-Palestinian tent encampment at Emerson College; more than 100 arrested

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/04/25/metro/emerson-encampment-cleared

Wu, Cox agreed on police removal of Emerson students' pro-Palestinian encampment before arrests, mayor says

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/04/26/metro/wu-cox-emerson-arrests-protest

Police begin clearing pro-Palestinian encampment at Northeastern University

https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/04/27/metro/tensions-rise-northeastern-encampment-late-friday-night

 
At 1:14 PM, Blogger Richard Layman said...

AP summary of protests

A look at the protests about the war in Gaza that have emerged on US college campuses

https://apnews.com/article/gaza-war-campus-protests-966eb531279f8e4381883fc5d79d5466

At Columbia, excuse the students, but not the faculty

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/26/columbia-protest-students-faculty-gaza-unrest/

Megan McArdle doesn't think the protests will have any effect on university investment policies wrt Israel. I'd say the headline is a bit misleading, because it only focuses on that.

The likelihood of the protests having some effect on how people think of "the conflict" is strong.

Why campus protests against Israel probably won’t be effective

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/25/campus-protests-columbia-divestment-voters/


The grim history of using troops against student protesters

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2024/04/26/kent-state-killings-lesson-protests/

 

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