Montreal Gazette

U.S. academics vote to boycott Israel

Move by group criticized as anti-education and anti-Semitic

- RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA THE NEW YORK TIMES

An associatio­n of U.S. professors with almost 5,000 members has voted to endorse an academic boycott of Israeli colleges and universiti­es, the group announced Monday, making it the largest academic group in the United States to back a growing movement to isolate Israel over its treatment of Palestinia­ns.

The group, the American Studies Associatio­n, said its members approved the boycott resolution by 2-1 in online balloting that concluded Sunday night, with about a quarter of the members voting.

“The resolution is in solidarity with scholars and students deprived of their academic freedom and it aspires to enlarge that freedom for all, including Palestinia­ns,” the American Studies Associatio­n said in a statement released Monday.

The statement cited “Israel’s violations of internatio­nal law and U.N. resolution­s; the documented impact of the Israeli occupation on Palestinia­n scholars and students; the extent to which Israeli institutio­ns of higher education are a party to state policies that violate human rights,” and other factors.

Boycott supporters concede that resolution­s by professors’ groups are primarily symbolic, as long as no U.S. college or university supports such an action. The boycott called on U.S. schools and academic groups to ban collaborat­ion with Israeli institutio­ns, but individual Israeli scholars would still be able to attend conference­s, lecture at U.S. universiti­es or do research with American colleagues, as long as they did not officially represent Israeli universiti­es or the government.

Still, attempts in the West to isolate Israel have received close attention in that country. The greatest danger to Israel may lie in calls for an economic boycott — an idea that has gained much more traction in Europe, where Israel has close trade ties — which resulted last week in a Dutch company, Vitens, announcing that it would no longer do business with Israel’s national water company.

Israelis are also accustomed to sharp criticism from Europe and unstinting support from the United States. The vote came despite a statement last week by the Palestinia­n president, Mahmoud Abbas, that his government’s stance is to boycott Israeli businesses and other activities in the occupied territorie­s, but not in Israel itself.

The national council of the Amer- ican Studies Associatio­n voted unanimousl­y on Dec. 4 in favour of a boycott resolution and then put the issue to its members. The group’s stance has pitted scholars and organizati­ons against one another in a heated debate about the ethics of academic boycotts, the motives behind the campaign and whether Israel is being singled out unfairly.

The movement to cut off relations with Israeli academic and cultural institutio­ns dates back a decade, but organizers say it was not until April that a U.S. academic group of any size, the Associatio­n for Asian American Studies, endorsed a boycott.

The Modern Language Associatio­n’s annual meeting next month will include a discussion session on academic boycotts, and it will consider a motion critical of Israel for restrictin­g professors’ freedom to visit Palestinia­n universiti­es.

The American Studies Associatio­n has never before called for an academic boycott of any nation’s universiti­es, said Curtis Marez, the group’s president and an associate professor of ethnic studies at the University of California, San Diego.

The singular focus on Israel has become the most pointed part of the boycott debate, with opponents seeing signs of anti-Semitism — which supporters vehemently deny — and arguing that the real aim of boycott backers is not to change Israel’s behaviour, but to eliminate the state.

On the Charlie Rose show on PBS last week, Lawrence Summers, the former Harvard University president and former Treasury secretary, disparaged “the idea that of all the countries in the world that might be thought to have human rights abuses, that might be thought to have inappropri­ate foreign policies, that might be thought to be doing things wrong, the idea that there’s only one that is worthy of boycott, and that is Israel.”

The American Associatio­n of University Professors, with 48,000 members, has reiterated its stance against academic boycotts, which it said “strike directly at the free exchange of ideas,” and not at those responsibl­e for oppression, stifling precisely the kind of interactio­n that would aid human rights.

The push for an academic boycott is an outgrowth of a broader campaign against Israel called the BDS movement, which calls for boycotts, disinvestm­ent and sanctions, much like those against South Africa in the 1980s.

The academic boycott movement has drawn far more attention in Britain, beginning in 2002, when two academic journals fired Israeli professors from their boards because of their nationalit­y. There have been several strong attempts in Britain’s largest higher-education labour group, the University and College Union, to put its weight behind a boycott.

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