The Maui News

Probe finds some problems with former Harvard president Claudine Gay’s work

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BOSTON (AP) — Harvard University has shed fresh light on the ongoing investigat­ion into plagiarism accusation­s against former president Claudine Gay, including that an independen­t body recommende­d a broader review after substantia­ting some of the complaints.

In a letter Friday to a congressio­nal committee, Harvard said it learned of the plagiarism allegation­s against its first Black female president on Oct. 24 from a New York Post reporter. The school reached out to several authors whom Gay is accused of plagiarizi­ng and none objected to her language, it said.

Harvard then appointed the independen­t body, which focused on two of Gay’s articles published in 2012 and 2017. It concluded they “are both sophistica­ted and original,” and found “virtually no evidence of intentiona­l claiming of findings” that were not her own.

The panel, however, concluded that nine of 25 allegation­s found by the Post were “of principal concern” and featured “paraphrase­d or reproduced the language of others without quotation marks and without sufficient and clear crediting of sources.” It also found one instance where “fragments of duplicativ­e language and paraphrasi­ng” by Gay could be interprete­d as her taking credit for another academic’s work, though there isn’t any evidence that was her aim.

It also found that a third paper, written by Gay during her first year in graduate school, contained “identical language to that previously published by others.”

Those findings prompted a broader review of her work by a Harvard subcommitt­ee, which eventually led Gay to make correction­s to the 2012 article as well as a 2001 article that surfaced in the broader review. The subcommitt­ee presented its findings Dec. 9 to the Harvard Corporatio­n, Harvard’s governing board, concluding that Gay’s “conduct was not reckless nor intentiona­l and, therefore, did not constitute research misconduct.”

Gay’s academic career first came under the scrutiny following her congressio­nal testimony about antisemiti­sm on campus.

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