Posted on 09/20/2006 2:45:04 PM PDT by Law is not justice but process
Dear Alumni:
As part of the university's response to the lacrosse incident, the Campus Culture Initiative (CCI) was launched in April, and Bob Thompson, dean of Trinity College, vice provost for undergraduate education, and a professor in the psychology department, was named its chair. Dean Thompson recently sent an update to the campus community on the work the committee conducted this summer and invited comments on its "two broad objectives. . . to find specific and constructive ways to promote respect and responsibility and to lessen campus divides." His letter appears below.
With Dean Thompson's help, the Duke Alumni Association has expanded this outreach to include alumni input. We value your voice and are glad to provide the means to include your comments and suggestions. Your message will be shared with members of the CCI Steering Committee and its subcommittees. The committee and the DAA may not respond to your submissions directly, but they will be compiled and submitted, as appropriate. To submit your suggestions, click here.
We thank you for your continuing concern and involvement as the university undergoes an extensive self-examination. We trust this learning opportunity will strengthen our goal of a more inclusive community, for students and alumni.
Forever Duke,
Thomas C. Clark ' 69 President, Duke Alumni Association
Campus Culture Initiative: Update # 1 from Bob Thompson As we begin a new academic year, I write to update the Duke community about the work of the Campus Culture Initiative Steering Committee. The president's charge to the Steering Committee is challenging and multifaceted. We have been asked to take the measure of our campus culture and see where it could be improved. We aim toward a culture where all community members take responsibility for their behavior and respect the rights of others. We strive not only to articulate a vision of what Duke can be, but also to analyze existing practices and bring forward initiatives needed to realize the vision.
The timeline for our work is also challenging. The Steering Committee was asked to provide the president with an interim report no later than December 1, 2006, and a final report no later than May 1, 2007.
The Steering Committee held its first meeting on April 25 and our work has progressed in phases. The first phase was devoted to framing our approach to the charge and organizing the work of the committee. We met four times in the weeks before Commencement. Initial discussions focused on both the events of last March and the responses of our community and led to a shared awareness that Duke is more characterized by divides and separations than we had fully understood or acknowledged. These "campus divides" relate not only to long-standing issues of race and gender but also separations with respect to social privilege, athletics, and campus-community relations. Two broad objectives were clearly identified. We seek to find specific and constructive ways to promote respect and responsibility and to lessen campus divides. Our shared goal is a stronger and more inclusive community.
The committee has adopted the approach of connecting with relevant initiatives, committees, projects, and reports, including the Women's Initiative, the Campus Life and Learning Project, and the Council on Civic Engagement. We also are committed to seek input from the Duke community throughout each phase of our work. The committee recognizes its role as advisory and not policy-setting and that our recommendations will be one point of advice among others. We seek to articulate a vision of campus culture and highlight choices along the pathway. We understand that our recommendations will need to be subsequently implemented through appropriate committees and administrative units.
The second phase of our work comprised the summer months. Given the difficulty of functioning as a 25-member committee during the summer, our approach was to form subgroups to address key issues, identify opportunities for improvement, and consider possible approaches. Four subgroups were formed and convened by members of the Steering Committee: Race (Professor Karla Holloway); Alcohol (Professor Phil Cook); Gender/Sexuality (Professors Anne Allison and Suzanne Shanahan); and Athletics (Professor Peter Wood). Forming subgroups also enabled the inclusion of other faculty, students, and staff as members or invited participants. Forming subgroups was a way to gather and analyze information for consideration by the entire Steering Committee in the fall. Each subgroup met four to six times during the summer. In addition, the Steering Committee met six times during the summer.
With the beginning of the fall term, we are entering the third phase of our work. The Steering Committee will meet weekly and for a half-day retreat in September. We will focus on integrating information from the subgroups, formulating questions and ideas, and soliciting input from the larger campus community. This is an intensive period of work for the committee in preparation for the meeting with the President's Council in November and submission of our interim report by December 1.
We look forward to having this community dialogue in the weeks ahead.
Bob Thompson Chair, Campus Culture Initiative
OK, I'll bite. In the interest of promoting equality and reducing social privilege, I propose that all university faculty and administrators be treated equally with all students. No more of the artificial, classist, hierarchical, and unequal treatment that students have received at the hands of the faculty and administration for too long. Might want to send them to reeducation classes, too. After all, this initiative is clearly Marx-inspired, so don't hold back, give it the full Maoist Cultural Revolution treatment that is the logical goal and end of all such movements...
Demonstrating yet again the wisdom of Buckley's dictum:
"I would rather be governed by the first 100 people whose names appear in the Boston telephone book than by the faculty of Harvard [Duke]."
They could start by demating an apology from the gang of 88.
Oh, they won't do that?
Then screw them.
Ping.
Why deal with those unpleasantries. Let's make ourselves feel good.
If I'm not mstaken, some of these guys are from that gang of 88:
Four subgroups were formed and convened by members of the Steering Committee: Race (Professor Karla Holloway); Alcohol (Professor Phil Cook); Gender/Sexuality (Professors Anne Allison and Suzanne Shanahan); and Athletics (Professor Peter Wood).
>>If I'm not mstaken, some of these guys are from that gang of 88:
You are correct.
Holloway is.
Cook is not.
Allison is.
Shanahan is not.
Wood is not.
I followed this thing reasonably closely, for about the first 60 days. I grabbed the gang of 88 pdfs off of the Duke site, since I figured they would disappear. Despicable people, those 88, minus any who have made public apologies for their actions.
Ping.
Retch!
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