San Francisco Chronicle

Petition calls for professor’s removal

UC Berkeley teacher accused of harassment

- By Nanette Asimov and Cynthia Dizikes

A group of UC Berkeley architectu­re students say their academic careers are in limbo because the university has allowed a prominent professor to serve on doctoral committees and advise them despite a 2016 campus finding that he sexually harassed a student.

More than 75 students, alumni and supporters signed a petition demanding the “immediate removal of Nezar AlSayyad from all positions at UC Berkeley” and sent it Monday to campus leaders and members of a faculty committee who have spent three months considerin­g whether to revoke Professor Nezar AlSayyad’s tenure.

“Current and prospectiv­e students as well as visiting scholars have been in the dark about AlSayyad’s status, perpetuati­ng a culture of ambiguity and profession­al uncertaint­y,” said the petition, which criticized the secretive nature of UC Berkeley’s disciplina­ry process.

Campus administra­tors relieved AlSayyad of

teaching duties after an investigat­ion found the renowned Middle East scholar and architectu­re professor ingratiate­d himself with graduate student Eva Hagberg Fisher before placing his hand on her upper thigh, proposing they become “close friends” and suggesting they go to Las Vegas.

But he still performs duties that graduate students depend on: serving on their committees, formally advising them, writing all-important letters of recommenda­tion.

The petition highlights the complexity of addressing sexual harassment in academia.

In Hollywood and elsewhere, the momentum of the #MeToo movement has toppled moguls, celebritie­s and politician­s quickly following publicatio­n of sexual misconduct allegation­s and findings.

But professors have tenure, a shield that protects them from being fired, whether for pursuing controvers­ial areas of research, for speaking out politicall­y — or for sexual harassment. So unless a tenured professor leaves voluntaril­y, as many do, a downfall can be slow and agonizing for everyone, including the accused.

“Professor AlSayyad is incredibly frustrated and disturbed by being in this position for as long as he’s had to endure it,” his attorney, Dan Siegel, told The Chronicle Tuesday. “He did not sexually harass anyone. He believes, and I believe, that the evidence that was presented at his (tenure) hearing establishe­s his innocence.”

The confidenti­al, three-day hearing before a committee of fellow professors took place in early November. No decision has been rendered and no timeline announced. In the 150-year history of the University of California system, eight professors have lost tenure, allowing them to be fired.

Rhetoric Professor Marianne Constable, who chairs the Faculty Senate’s Privilege and Tenure Committee that held the hearing, declined to comment, citing the confidenti­ality of the process.

Chancellor Carol Christ’s spokeswoma­n, Janet Gilmore, also declined to comment on any case involving a professor.

AlSayyad, on the UC Berkeley faculty since 1985, has taught no classes for more than a year. He continues to receive his $211,000 salary.

“It’s ridiculous,” said Hagberg Fisher, who signed the petition. “He’s still advising students, still on (academic) committees and still a member of the department.”

Hagberg Fisher said the petition was not about her case.

“It’s about addressing the needs of all the students that are currently in this weird educationa­l limbo,” she said.

Others who signed the petition agree that AlSayyad’s half-in and half-out situation has created problems. In some cases, students chose UC Berkeley specifical­ly because of AlSayyad, a renowned author and intellectu­al in his field, yet can take no classes from him. In other cases, students have participat­ed in earlier protests and demanded that he be removed.

The situation has “created an, at times, toxic environmen­t,” said Eric Peterson, a doctoral student in architectu­re who helped organize the petition. “If you speak out against him, you lose an essential advocate for your profession­al success and economic livelihood.”

Marianela D’Aprile, who received her master’s degree in architectu­re in May, said she signed the letter because she was dismayed that AlSayyad was allowed to continue advising students and participat­e on the committee that makes graduate admissions decisions.

“It is really infuriatin­g,” said D’Aprile, 25, who became friends with Hagberg Fisher in recent months and now works for her as an architectu­ral consultant. “It leaves students in this very precarious and vulnerable position, especially students who are still working with him.”

 ??  ?? Nezar AlSayyad is accused of sexually harassing a student.
Nezar AlSayyad is accused of sexually harassing a student.

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