Acadia investigation targets controversial prof
HALIFAX • Acadia University has launched a formal i nvestigation i nto complaints against a professor over controversial comments he made on social media and in the classroom.
Heather Hemming, vicepresident academic at the Wolfville, N. S., school, said in a letter to professor Rick Mehta that the university has received complaints from students, faculty and others with concerns about his views.
“These concerns relate to the manner in which you are expressing views that you are alleged to be advancing or supporting and, in some instances, time that you are spending on these issues in the classroom,” she said in a letter on Feb. 13. “The university has a legal responsibility to provide an environment free from discrimination, sexual harassment and personal harassment.”
Hemming added: “The nature and frequency of these complaints and the significance of the allegations is concerning for the university, and we have determined the necessity of proceeding to a formal investigation.”
The university has retained Wayne MacKay, professor emeritus at Dalhousie University’s Schulich School of Law, to investigate and provide a report to the university, she said.
A spokesman for Acadia had no further comment.
Mehta has been outspoken both on campus and on social media about a range of contentious issues including decolonization, i mmigration and gender politics, garnering both supporters and opposition.
He has come under fire for saying multiculturalism is a scam, there’s no wage gap between men and women, and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission has created a victim narrative to prompt “endless apologies and compensation.”
Mehta bills himself as a free- speech advocate trying to build bridges across political divides, but critics say he perpetuates harmful stereotypes and is simply seeking attention.
“He’s j ust sort of parroting the much more popular Jordan Peterson. He’s very clearly just trying to piggyback on that to gain a certain notoriety,” said Matthew Sears, associate professor of classics and ancient history at the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton.
Peterson, a University of Toronto professor and bestselling author, has become a celebrity of the right for, among other things, steadfastly refusing to use genderneutral terms.
Mehta, like Peterson a psychology professor, argues he has done nothing wrong, and is only trying to offer students a different perspective from what he calls the dominant political orientation on campus.
“I would have no problem if people refuted me and told me I was being unreasonable, that is perfectly fine. I would love it if students just told me I’m wrong,” the associate professor of psychology said.
“I made sure I told students they wouldn’t be tested on the specific materials, I just want them to think about these concepts.”
Those concepts include gender equity and the wage gap, which he said can be explained by people’s choices and differences between the sexes.
Mehta pointed to a study that showed men prefer more competitive careers “whereas the women on average tended to prefer spending time in the community.”
He said he would encourage debate from students, which would help t hem be critical thinkers and informed citizens.