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Note that this is a static version of the original website
as hosted on the BYU website in 1998. Tämä on BYU:n
sivustolla ilmestyneen alkuperäisen sivuston päivittämätön
kopio. Pelottavaa tekstiä. |
Welcome to the Homepage of the BYU Chapter of the American
Association of University Professors (AAUP).
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The American Association of University Professors works to
enhance academic freedom at colleges and universities across
the country.
The BYU Chapter of the AAUP is similarly dedicated to helping
BYU fulfill its promise.
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- Information on hiring, retention and promotion issues
at BYU
- Information on the Firing of Steven Epperson
- Notes on the BYU Academic Freedom Document of 1992
- Information on the BYU Visit of the National AAUP Investigative
Team
- Gail Houston; Pertinent Information and Documents Relevant
to Houston's Tenure Denial
- Brian Evenson; Letter of Resignation from BYU
- Issues Pertinent to the Status of Women at BYU
- Issues Dealing with the new BYU Ecclesiastical Endorsement
Policy
- Issues of Academic Freedom at BYU
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1. Problems With Hiring, Retention And
Promotion Issues At BYU |
The BYU AAUP believes important problems exist in policies
and procedures pertinent to hiring, retention and promotion
at BYU. For example, we recently discovered that the University
Administration asked that five third-year review candidates
in the English Department add to their files all student evaluation
summaries, all student comments, all theses worked on, texts
of all speeches, panel discussions, etc., made at symposia,
conferences, and fora dealing with Mormon issues, and texts
of all material published on Mormon issues.
We contend the requirement to add these materials to a candidate's
file represents substantial departure from established policy.
We are very concerned with these changes, done without faculty
involvement, discussion or even announcement.
In response to these policy changes and to other issues
pertinent to hiring, retention and promotion, the following
correspondence between the BYU AAUP and BYU administration
was initiated. We hope by this correspondence to initiate
a meaningful discussion of the entire third-year and tenure
review process.
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Letter to President Merrill Bateman; 27 February 1997
February 27, 1997
Dear President Bateman:
This is our first attempt to communicate with you since our
meeting at the end of January at which you emphasized your
"open door policy" and expressed your desire to work with
us in the future.
It has come to our attention that the University Council
on Rank and Status has asked that five third-year review candidates
in the English Department add to their files all student evaluation
summaries, all student comments, all theses worked on, texts
of all speeches, panel discussions, etc., made at symposia,
conferences, and forums dealing with Mormon issues, and texts
of all material published on Mormon issues.
According to the policies established in the "University
Policy on Faculty Rank and Status: Professorial":
7.4 It is the candidate's responsibility to develop a file
that is professional and complete as defined in this document.
[Emphasis added. There is nothing in the document or in
the "Checklist for . . . Documentation" that even suggests
anything like what is now being required.]
7.5 Candidates should make available in the departmental
office copies of other books, peer-reviewed articles, other
publications or other written materials which the faculty
member has authored, edited, or otherwise contributed to
. . . which are to be considered for evaluation. [Emphasis
added. The document and the "Checklist" require "a list
of all scholarly work (refereed journal articles and technical
publications. . .)," and clearly not copies of remarks made
on panels or non-scholarly writing in Mormon-related publications.]
7.6 The faculty member should provide a complete file but
use discretion, because the file itself is an indication
of a faculty member's professional maturity. The faculty
member is particularly encouraged to avoid the inclusion
of extraneous or non-substantial evidence, and to keep the
file at a minimum size consistent with a complete, relevant
presentation. [Emphasis added. The newly required documents
fall under "extraneous or non-substantial evidence" and
are not relevant.]
7.7 The department chair should request student evaluations
of faculty teaching for each course taught. . . . Care should
be taken to insure that a representative sample of students
is obtained. [The department chair is instructed to read
these and summarize them, not to provide all of them to
the university.]
The policy clearly does not require "all student evaluation
summaries" or "all student comments." There is no requirement
that student theses be included in the file. And there is
no mention of texts of all speeches and panel discussions
made at symposia, conferences, and forums dealing with Mormon
issues or texts of all material published on Mormon issues.
This is an unannounced, ad hoc requirement that has not been
reviewed by the university community as a whole and that goes
counter to the spirit and letter of university procedures.
The new policy has several serious drawbacks. It places an
unreasonable burden on the candidate to supply large amounts
of material. It will come between students and their thesis
advisors, inhibiting the very inquiry a thesis is meant to
promote. And, as the following historical note suggests, it
provides the administration the opportunity to construct oversimplified
portraits in place of the more informed and accurate portraits
that members of a department construct through summary of
their personal experience with the candidate.
Kent Harrison, of the Department of Physics and Astronomy,
reports that his father, Bertrand F. Harrison, who taught
botany at BYU for 45 years, headed the University Teaching
Committee for several years, at President Wilkinson's request.
Student evaluations of teaching were instituted about that
same time (late 1960's). His father insisted that teaching
evaluations be made available only to the faculty member him/herself
and to the department chair, who had the best information
about a faculty member's individual circumstances.
More distanced readers of a few excerpted student comments,
the argument went, will invariably form a false picture of
a candidate (note the use that was made of such excerpts from
Gail Houston's evaluations).
Because the change is apparently aimed solely at five faculty
members in the English Department, we are concerned that the
university is not following its own wish to maintain balance
and consistency in the rank and tenure process. We are concerned
that such expansive and intrusive gathering of information
will send the message that the rank and status procedure is
not intended to discover the quality and breadth of the candidates'
thinking, but rather an effort to control the academic pursuits
of faculty and to punish.
Does your administration understand what effect this new
request will have on present and potential members of the
BYU community?
What will this mean for the supposed "extra academic freedom"
we enjoy here to speak and do research on Mormon issues? Will
this become the one university in the country where no one
will be willing to risk working on Mormon topics? In this
climate, what faculty member would ever be willing to speak
on any issue that might at some future time be deemed to be
controversial by some future authority?
Finally, while we hold strongly to the opinion that it is
a change of policy and improper to request these additional
materials from the English Department candidates, in the event
that such materials were to be supplied, another serious problem
arises in requesting that candidates comment on the materials
to help put them in context.
Since the University Council has not carefully specified
the reasons for this request, the comments from the candidates
will be made only on the basis of their speculations about
the Council's potential concerns. These comments could miss
the mark and actually raise new questions that the Council
has not contemplated, thus putting a loyal candidate, who
is trying to do the right thing, in the position of inadvertently
creating problems for himself or herself. This is unacceptable
in any respectable system of policies and rules created for
the protection of the faculty as well as the institution.
Having said this, we repeat that it is not acceptable for
the University Faculty Council on Rank and Status to make
any request for documents outside those required by established
procedures, and that such a requirement violates the candidates'
academic freedom.
We ask you to carefully consider the appropriateness of the
request from the Rank and Status committee and direct them
in the proper way to proceed.
Sincerely,
Members of the BYU Chapter of the AAUP
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Letter to the BYU AAUP from Jim Gordon; 5 March 1997
March 5, 1997
Your letter of February 27 has been referred to me for response.
The practice of review committees to request aditional information
when they have questions is well established. Because the
English Department and College of Humanities review committees
have asked to see any documents that the University Faculty
Council will use as it considers the files, the candidates
have been requested to include the documents in their files
so that they can be reviewed by the committees at all levels.
I disagree that requesting additional information violates
the candidates' academic freedom. The Faculty Council is charged
with conducting careful reviews, and it is entitled to review
the entire body of a candidate's work if it chooses to do
so. The rank and status policy does not require the Faculty
Council to provide the candidates with a list of concerns.
Rather, the Faculty Council will review the files in light
of the expectations that are set forth in the rank and status
policy and that apply to all faculty.
I hope that the above information is helpful.
Sincerely,
James D. Gordon III
cc Randall Jones, Jay Fox, Thomas Plummer, Douglas Thayer
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Letter to President Merrill Bateman; 13 March 1997
13 March 1997
Dear President Bateman:
In response to our letter of February 27 outlining
concerns about requirements made of the five English-Department
candidates for third-year review, Jim Gordon (5 March) stated
that in his opinion the University was legally justified in
its actions. He ignored everything we argued about the effects
of this new policy on the academic life and morale of the
university. In what follows, we will comment on Jim's points
and then reiterate what we believe to be compelling reasons
for reconsidering a policy that will, in our opinion, not
be in the best interest of this university.
Jim wrote that "because the English Department and College
of Humanities review committees have asked to see any documents
that the University Faculty Council will use as it considers
the files, the candidates have been requested to include the
documents in their files so that they can be reviewed by the
committees at all levels."
When Tom Plummer (chair of the College of Humanities advancement
committee) and Doug Thayer (chair of the advancement committee
of the English Department) met last year with the administration,
they did not ask that candidates be required to include any
and all documents relating to Mormonism, all theses directed,
all student comments on evaluations. Does Jim's reply mean
that the University has always collected all that information
and has routinely used it for rank and status decisions, without
the knowledge of the candidates or department or college committees?
"The practice of review committees to request additional
information when they have questions is well established,"
Jim wrote. What are the questions here? Does the University
council have the same questions for all five of these candidates
and do the questions require the same documents? Are these
five candidates, and none of the other candidates for advancement
across the university, under suspicion?
Jim wrote that "the Faculty Council . . . is entitled to
review the entire body of a candidate's work if it chooses
to do so." How does the administration define "work"? If the
faculty member is a physicist and gives a speech denouncing
nuclear testing at the Nevada Test Site, would you consider
that "work"? If a faculty member in Engineering gave a talk
in a sacrament meeting about Jesus and the Pharisees, would
you consider that "work"? If a faculty member in Music read
a paper at the Sunstone symposium on the science fiction of
Orson Scott Card, would you consider that "work"?. There must
be distinctions made between the work BYU faculty members
do professionally and what they do in their private lives.
For a fuller argument of Jim's point that "the rank and
status policy does not require the Faculty Council to provide
the candidates with a list of concerns," see Fred Gedicks
letter of 8 April 1996 in support of Gail Houston (copy included).
But finally, although these details are interesting and
important, our concerns about the effects of this policy on
the academic climate at BYU lie at the heart of our protest.
We repeat:
The new policy has several serious drawbacks beyond its
departure from established procedures:
It places an unreasonable burden on the candidate to supply
large amounts of material.
It will come between students and their thesis advisors,
inhibiting the very inquiry a thesis is meant to promote.
It provides the administration the opportunity to construct
oversimplified sketches in place of the more informed and
accurate portraits that members of a department construct
through summary of their personal experience with the candidate.
Because the change is apparently aimed solely at five faculty
members in the English Department, we are concerned that the
university is not following its own wish to maintain balance
and consistency in the rank and tenure process.
Such expansive and intrusive gathering of information will
send the message that the rank and status procedure is not
intended to discover the quality and breadth of the candidates'
thinking, but is rather an effort to control the academic
pursuits of faculty and to punish.
This action will have an inhibiting effect on research on
and discussion of Mormon topics.
We assume that you and the members of your administration
are interested in these issues. But your short response providing
"information" belies that assumption.
We remain committed to our belief that BYU will be a more
vital and productive university if decisions are made in the
context of vigorous debate and open processes.
Sincerely,
Members of the BYU Chapter of the AAUP
cc AVP Alan Wilkins, AAVP Jim Gordon
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Letter from Jim Gordon to the BYU AAUP; 25 March 1997
March 25, 1997
Dear [Members of the BYU Chapter of the AAUP]:
I am responding to your letter of March 13.
Your letter correctly observes that the department and college
committees did not request that the candidates include additional
information in their files. However, the University Faculty
Council on Rank and Status acted within its jurisdiction when
it requested additional information relevant to the candidates'
teaching, scholarship, and citizenship. Because the department
and college committees asked to see any documents that the
Faculty Council will use as it considers the candidates, the
candidates were requested to include the documents in their
files at the beginning of the process so that the items could
be reviewed by the committees at all levels.
You have asked, "Does Jim's reply mean that the University
has always collected all that information and has routinely
used it for rank and status decisions, without the knowledge
of the candidates or department or college committees?" The
answer is no. If documents are added to a file, the candidate
is given an opportunity to respond.
Incidently, your description of the documents requested
by the Faculty Council is incorrect. I assume that you have
not seen the Faculty Council's request, but are instead relying
to some degree on a generalized description that was circulated
in the English Department.
The Faculty Council's request is narrower than that description.
I understand that the candidates have been advised of the
specific request.
A faculty member's body of work consists of his [sic] teaching,
scholarship, and citizenship as described in the rank and
status policy. The requested documents relate to activities
with students or in public and are relevant to the standards
set forth in the rank and status policy.
While I have a close and longstanding friendship with Professor
Gedicks, I disagree that the rank and status policy requires
the Faculty Council to give candidates a list of concerns.
That issue was addressed last year, and it was correctly concluded
that the rank and status policy does not require such a list.
The standards that apply to a candidate's teaching, scholarship,
and citizenship are clearly set forth in the rank and status
policy.
I would like to respond briefly to the drawbacks your letter
asserts about the Faculty Council's request for additional
information:
- The burden on candidates is not unreasonable in light
of the importance of the rank and status process. In most
cases it merely requires some additional photocopying.
- Review committees are entitled to evaluate theses and
dissertation. Section 3.5.1. of the rank and status policy
provides: "It is incumbent upon the applicant to provide
persuasive documentation, such as the following: . . . The
products of good teaching and mentoring, such as: . . .
honors, masters, or PhD theses supervised . . . ." The theses
and dissertations are relevant, and it is incumbent upon
the candidates to provide them if requested by a review
committee.
- The recommendations at every level will be more informed,
not less, by the additional information.
- Faculty review committees request additional information
when they have questions. The fact that they have questions
about some candidates does not mean that they are being
inconsistent. Review committees have also requested additional
information about candidates in other departments.
- The request for additional information is intended only
to help in evaluating the candidates' teaching, scholarship,
and citizenship consistent with the standards set forth
in University policy.
- The assertion that the request will inhibit research on
Mormon topics assumes that the Faculty Council has requested,
as your letter asserts, "any and all documents relating
to Mormonism." That assumption is incorrect.
People will disagree about whether the benefits of the Faculty
Council's request exceed the costs. However, that is not the
issue. The issue is whether the administration should intervene
in a faculty peer-review process and prohibit a faculty review
committee from requesting relevant information. It is ironic
that the AAUP, which advocates faculty self-governance, is
insisting that the administration overrule the request of
a faculty committee that is acting within its jurisdiction.
It is also ironic that the local AAUP group advocates "vigorous
debate and open processes," but wants the administration to
deny a request for information that a faculty committee considers
relevant in the review process. Vigorous debate and open processes
are best served by honoring the Faculty Council's request
for additional relevant information.
The practice of review committees to request additional
information is well established. The administration has consistently
honored requests for additional information by faculty review
committees at the department, college, and university levels.
To overrule a faculty committee's legitimate request for information
would be a departure from established procedures.
Sincerely,
James D. Gordon III
cc Randall L. Jones, C. Jay Fox, Thomas G. Plummer, Douglas
H. Thayer
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Letter to Jim Gordon; 9 April 1997
James D. Gordon III
Associate Academic Vice President
D-387 ASB
8 April 1997
Dear Jim:
Thank you for your letter of 25 March responding to our
letters of 13 March and 27 February.
You correctly point out that in our first letter we requested
something that seems to go against AAUP guidelines -- "We
ask you to carefully consider the appropriateness of the request
from the Rank and Status committee and direct them in the
proper way to proceed." We added that sentence to a draft
of our letter in a conscious attempt to ease the tension,
to allow the administration to step back gracefully from a
counterproductive and ill-advised policy. We should not have
done so, and we apologize. In the process, however, you have
clearly stated the administration's commitment to faculty
governance, and that is a positive step.
It seems important, nevertheless, to consider the context
in which we asked the administration to request that a committee
adhere to university regulations.
There is essentially no faculty governance at BYU. The
single elected faculty group, the "Faculty Advisory Council,"
has only advisory power.
Contrary to AAUP guidelines accepted and practiced by
nearly every university in the United States, the University
Faculty Council on Rank and Status, arguably the most important
committee at this university, is not elected by faculty,
but appointed by the administration.
This Council is not chaired by a faculty member, but by
an administrator.
The Council on Rank and Status has overturned departmental
and college-committee recommendations in every recent controversial
case relating to academic freedom.
The letter requesting that the five English Department
candidates for third-year review provide additional materials,
including presentations made at symposia and fora relating
to Mormonism, was written by you, as chair of that Council,
and sent under your name.
On the basis of our experience with administrative procedures
at least since 1993 (the Konchar-Farr and Knowlton cases)
and on the basis of reports from members of the Faculty
Council on Rank and Status, it is our perception that the
committee did not vote to request that information, but
that it was an administrative decision. (Endnote #1)
Third-year and tenure review has become a zero-sum game
wherein even productive junior faculty members are in serious
jeopardy of losing their jobs. Relations between the administration
and faculty have suffered greatly; and the Faculty Council
for Rank and Status, as it has gone against departmental
and college recommendations on the basis of its interpretations
of candidates' "worthiness," bears some of the responsibility
for that decline.
A few additional notes:
You argue that we misrepresented the contents of your letter
to the five candidates in the English Department. While we
did not reproduce the exact wording, we correctly captured
its meaning. Would you have preferred that we reproduce the
extensive and telling list of suspect publications and symposia
and fora you mentioned: Sunstone, Dialogue, B.H. Roberts Society,
Mormon Women's Forum, etc.?
You write that "The request for additional information is
intended only to help in evaluating the candidates' teaching,
scholarship, and citizenship consistent with the standards
set forth in University policy"; but in the context the administration
has established with intrusive questions to and investigation
of prospective faculty members (Endnote #2), and by refusing
advancement to faculty members on the basis of arbitrary,
unannounced, and unforeseeable standards, the request is bound
to be seen as simply as an attempt to find reasons to deny
advancement. In a more robust environment, your note that
"vigorous debate and open processes are best served by . .
. [providing] additional relevant information" would make
sense. But in place of vigorous debate and open processes,
we are witnessing concerted (and demoralizing) actions by
our administrators to determine, unilaterally, which colleagues
will join us and who will be required to leave.
While it is true that the rank and status document allows
that "honors, masters, or Ph.D. theses supervised" may be
(!) included in advancement files as evidence of good teaching
(and we concur that theses can in fact reflect a faculty member's
skill as a mentor), it seems clear that the current request
of these five candidates is not aimed at evaluating teaching,
but rather at finding methodological approaches (feminist?
postmodern?) opposed by administrators, or statements by the
students opposed to someone's definition of Church doctrine
-- evidence that can be used to punish the advisor. Again,
in an environment committed to academic excellence, our objection
would not arise.
In response to our argument about the potential for misrepresentation
through the raw data of student comments on evaluations as
opposed to summaries provided by departmental committees and
chairs, you wrote that "the recommendations at every level
will be more informed, not less, by the additional information."
Republican Senators recently demanded that they be allowed
to see the raw FBI files on a cabinet nominee before approving
him. Because those files include every unsubstantiated allegation
and rumor and therefore contain false and/or irrelevant information,
it was argued that more information was not better information.
That is our argument: the best, most complete, most accurate
picture of a candidate is found in the departmental summary
of a candidate. After all, those with the best information
and with the greatest ability to bring context to a candidate's
strengths and weaknesses are those colleagues closest to the
candidate.
Finally, although we appreciate the time you spend to respond
to us, we are concerned that our exchange of letters is not
particularly productive. This correspondence has turned out
to be a largely private and adversarial process: you defending
the administration's actions and we questioning them. Unfortunately,
there does not seem to be any real give and take. This is
a "debate" over issues that have already been decided without
consultation or apparent deliberation by the BYU administration,
and you are merely providing "information." As we have stated
repeatedly, we are concerned that the university community
at large is not involved in an ongoing and meaningful discussion
of faculty governance and academic freedom at BYU. We continue
to be concerned that those affected by policies have little
say in establishing and implementing them. These concerns
led us to ask the AAUP to send its investigative team to BYU,
and we hope that their eventual report will facilitate more
faculty involvement in decisions here; but aren't there ways
we can work better together as faculty and administration
to decide questions crucial to us all?
What would you think, for example, of a public discussion
of these issues, moderated by an independent, respected senior
faculty member?
Sincerely,
Members of the BYU Chapter of the AAUP
cc President Merrill J. Bateman, AVP Alan Wilkins
Endnote #1: Last Monday (March 31), in the English
Department faculty meeting with Alan Wilkins and Merrill Bateman,
members of the department raised the question of the fairness
of the additional requests of our third-year review candidates.
During the discussion, Stephen Tanner, currently a member
of the University Council on Rank and Status, explained his
perceptions of the request. He said that from the discussion
in which this list was generated, he thought the list to be
merely advisory and helpful to the English Department Rank
and Status Committee. He said that Jim Gordon asked the Council,
"What sorts of things should the English Department be looking
at so that they examine all the relevant information about
their candidates?" Suggestions were made by individual members
of the Council, several of whom have only begun their assignment
on that body. Stephen said that the material requested should
not have been considered as an official request of the Council
because the Council did not vote upon and approve the individual
items suggested; they didn't feel they needed to because they
were only making a recommendation, not issuing a mandate.
For Jim Gordon then to interpret that list as a mandate and
in his letter to require the candidates to submit the materials
seems to us a misuse of his authority and a deception of both
the University Council and the English Department. Or, if
he did not do this intentionally, it is a very serious mistake
that he ought to be willing to admit and rectify. Almost the
entire faculty of the English Department was present in this
meeting, and we all heard Steve Tanner explain what he thought.
President Bateman seemed to agree with Steve Tanner and recognize
the error because he instructed Doug Thayer to get back to
Jim Gordon about the matter. President Bateman said, "It is
likely this will not happen again." (As reported by three
professors of English present at the discussion.)
Endnote #2: Reports from interviews with you indicate
that you are disqualifying candidates based on their answers
to questions that feel like they are coming from the House
Committee on Un-Mormon Activities, e.g. What would you tell
a student who said she prayed to a Mother in Heaven? What
would you do if a General Authority asked you not to publish
research you had done? What do you think of academic freedom
at BYU?
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2. Information on the Firing of Steven
Epperson |
The following article by Scott Abbott of Brigham Young University
will appear in the coming edition of Sunstone.
On Ecclesiastical Endorsement at Brigham Young University
Scott Abbott
Religion is being destroyed by the Inquisition, for to
see a man burned because he believes he has acted rightly
is painful to people, it exasperates them. William
of Orange
During Gail Houston's August 1996 appeal of Brigham Young
University's decision to deny her tenure, despite overwhelmingly
positive English Department and College Committee votes, Associate
Academic Vice President James Gordon testified that procedurally
the University could not be faulted. Houston broke into his
technical testimony to remind Gordon and the appeal panel
that the hearing was about more than technicalities, that
she was a woman with a family, that she was being forced from
a position at a University where she had served with dedication,
that the decision, in short, was existentially important to
her. Gordon's responded to the panel that in her outburst
she had exhibited the behavior that had lead to her dismissal:
"From the moment she arrived on campus we have been unable
to control her."
On October 22, 1996, Steven Epperson, an assistant professor
of history at BYU since 1993, was told that his services would
no longer be required as of the end of August 1997. This made
him an early casualty of the policy announced by BYU President
Merrill Bateman on February 8, 1996, according to which the
bishop "of each Church member employed at BYU" would be asked
to certify annually "whether the person is currently eligible
for a [temple] recommend."
The University clearly has the legal right to establish
regulations like the one demanding that all faculty must undergo
ecclesiastical endorsement; and Epperson's bishop, for reasons
I will enumerate later, would not certify him. Similarly,
James Gordon may have been right when he asserted the University
correctly carried out its own policies in Gail Houston's case
(although the American Association of University Professors
has argued otherwise, and is currently formally investigating
BYU for academic freedom violations). But when Houston appealed
for a wiser, more charitable judgment, when she asked that
Gordon, for the University, look into her face and discern
there more than the features of a feminist who has supposedly
"enervated the moral fiber" of the University, she showed
us a way out of the sanctimonious edifice we have constructed
for ourselves, or have allowed to be constructed.
In this spirit, I would like you to consider the following
portrait of Steven Epperson. My rendering will not do him
justice; but it is fuller and more honest than the meager
sketch passed from his bishop to BYU administrators. I have
known Steven and his family for nearly twenty years. We have
collaborated together. We are friends.
Steven was born in Salt Lake City in 1954. After high school
he enrolled as a student at Brown University. He served a
mission in France from 1974 to 1976. A section from his poem
"Tangled Woods and Parisian Light" (Sunstone, April 1991)
evokes an experience from that time, contrasting the quiet
message of two missionaries with a riot taking place nearby:
. . .
A boy clung to his father's leg
Eyes on the street wide and wincing,
The man cradled his son's head listening
While the other pair spoke in low voices,
Searching for words in an alien tongue.
A dog was strung up on a lamp post,
A placard hung round its attenuated neck,
Its hanging tongue the same deep crimson
As the shrill apocalyptic text
Which it bore upon its broken chest.
The two bent nearer the father and the son
As if to shield them from the proximate menace,
Continuing the tale of a youth
And the questions he bore into a tangled wood.
The seried ranks of acolytes bore the epicenter of the quake away
Leaving clustered knots of onlookers among the rubble
To register the aftershocks, the emptied vials of wrath --
The simplicity of the shouted syllogisms
The utter directness of the violence
The thrill of the extraordinary gesture.
The tale neared its end:
"The woods shone.
The boy returned through the fields,
A live ember of divine words in his hand.
And thus his story began."
Steven was graduated from Brown in religious studies in
1979. He married Diana Girsdansky, whom he had met in the
Providence Ward. After he had earned an M.A. from the University
of Chicago Divinity School, Steven moved with Diana and their
children to Princeton, New Jersey, where they spent a year
before beginning a Ph.D. program in religious studies at Temple
University in Philadelphia. I still remember the first priesthood
meeting I sat through with the young man whose earnest voice
and careful thinking made us all look forward to the year
he would spend as a member of the Princeton Ward. At Temple,
Steven studied with Paul van Buren, now director of the Center
of Ethics and Religious Pluralism at the Shalom Institute
in Jerusalem, and worked with Mormon historian Richard Bushman,
then at the University of Delaware. For a personal description
of Steven's years at Temple, see "House of the Temple, House
of the Lord: A View from Philadelphia" (Dialogue, Fall 1987).
After graduation, the Eppersons moved to Salt Lake City,
where Steven became history curator at the Museum of Church
History and Art. He helped develop the permanent exhibition
of Church history now displayed on the museum's main floor
and curated various exhibitions on Church history and art,
including "The Mountain of the House of the Lord," an exhibit
commemorating the centennial of the Salt Lake Temple. In 1993
Steven began teaching as an assistant professor in BYU's history
department.
When BYU's new policy required Steven's Bishop, Andrew Clark,
to certify his temple worthiness, Clark refused, on the grounds
that Steven was not attending Sunday school or priesthood
meeting, nor was he currently paying tithing. Some background
on both counts will be helpful.
Although he was still paying fast offerings, Steven was
in fact paying no tithing at the time. Diana was starting
up the Children's Music Conservatory, a public, non-profit,
and initially expensive undertaking, and their best estimate
was that after the Music Conservatory's summer camp in June
it would begin to break even and they would be repaid the
money they had paid out.
Hannah, the Epperson's daughter, and Diana were not attending
church, the family was going off in different directions,
Steven reports, and there was some tension and disagreement.
Uncomfortable with that state of affairs, they followed Hannah's
advice and sought a Sunday activity they could do together
as a family. Eventually they began going to Pioneer Park to
join other Salt Lake residents in feeding the homeless. This
was a deliberate and thoughtful attempt to keep the family
together and focused on Sunday-related issues and services.
Between November 1995 and April 1996, Steven raced back from
Pioneer Park to attend sacrament meeting in his ward.
On May fifth, several months after Bishop Clark's initial
refusal to certify Steven temple worthy and after Steven had
been contacted by James Gordon, Steven met with Clark. He
offered, despite the family problems it would cause, to attend
priesthood and Sunday school in a neighboring ward, and explained
he would pay tithing again after the Conservatory's summer
camp. On the same day, in an incident that felt, in the context
of the attempt to come to terms, like a slap in the face,
Clark refused to approve Nick, the Epperson's youngest son,
for ordination to the priesthood -- because he would not promise
to attend all of his meetings. Nick said he would be with
his family half of the month and attend meetings the other
half; but this wasn't good enough for Clark.
On May 10, Steven had a follow-up telephone conversation
with Clark, who told him that July-September was an insufficient
period to judge whether he was a sincere tithe payer, and
that no other church meetings would fill the requirement.
Steven was a member of the 18th Ward. Period. Clark lectured
Steven on principles of "priesthood leadership," explaining
that Steven should lead and expect his family to follow as
he "laid out the program." (Later in the month, Steven met
with Stake President Wood in a desparate attempt to plead
Nick's case. Wood listened while Steven explained that it
felt to him that Clark was punishing Nick for Steven's choices,
but finally said he would have to work out the matter with
Clark.)
All Steven could hope for at this point was that the BYU
administration would try to understand that his predicament
was the result of the inflexibility of his local leaders,
and perhaps intervene. On May 17, Steven met with Gordon and
told him that Clark had rebuffed his good faith effort to
begin paying tithing at the end of June and to attend priesthood
and Sunday school in another ward. He asked Gordon to speak
with his bishop to try to achieve a compromise. Gordon said
he could do nothing.
Finally, in mid-October, Gordon asked Steven if he could
speak with his bishop. Steven agreed, asking only that Gordon
give him a full report of what Clark said, so that he could
verify the information. Gordon agreed. On October 22, Steven
was summoned to Gordon's office, to discuss, Steven thought,
what the bishop had said. Gordon gave a short report of his
conversation with Clark. Steven responded. The letter of dismissal,
which Gordon subsequently handed to Steven, was lying on the
desk while they spoke. The administration had decided, the
letter said, to terminate Steven's contract as of August 1997.
When Gordon later explained, in a Deseret News article about
Steven's dismissal (23 January 1997), that the person involved
"can give us permission to speak with the bishop, and we will
work with people if they are making a good faith effort,"
it did not match the process Steven had experienced, for Gordon
had refused to speak with the bishop to work things out and
denied Steven's good faith effort in the face of absolute
inflexibility.
I tell this story not to argue that Steven was doing something
better than going to church, nor to argue that his stubbornness
in the face of what he saw as un-Christian inflexibility was
the most politic choice, but rather to point out that routine
church activity (as opposed to deeply held values) may be
subject to circumstances. What is possible one year becomes
more complicated the next; sometimes family dynamics require
innovative strategies. A religious community that governs
itself according to the spirit of its laws and basic principles,
such as the sanctity of marriage, the primacy of the family,
self reliance, etc., should be flexible enough to include
a variety of non-destructive behaviors. A formalistic, impatient,
over-pious community may break its less-orthodox members on
the wheel of ephemeral policy. Do thirty years of devotion,
tithe paying, a mission, temple marriage, and church work
mean nothing in the face of a year of well-meant but slightly
altered church activity?
Where does this kind of insistence on the letter of administrative
procedure get us? Will more people comply with its demands
than before the new policy? And more to the point, will BYU
faculty and staff now be more spiritual? Or do others respond
to coercion the way I do? My nature is to do well the things
I choose and to despise and evade what I am forced to do.
Or, if I decide to knuckle under even while disagreeing with
the requirement, I experience a diminished sense of dignity.
Emphasizing the letter over the spirit shifts a people's sense
of morality from heartfelt individual commitment to superficial
observance of outward requirements. And the arbitrariness
of the policy is staggering; in contrast to Steven's case,
one Tooele County bishop has called a ward member who finds
church attendance distasteful to serve breakfast to the homeless
in Salt Lake City.
Steven Epperson stands for others who are currently under
investigation by the BYU administration (on December 13, 1996,
Merrill Bateman told BYU Humanities faculty that these number
approximately 100) and who, too, may be asked to leave, one
by one, in the coming months. By insisting on the letter of
its new policy, by weeding out members of the staff and faculty
who cannot satisfy individual bishops' personal interpretations
of the standard of temple worthiness, no matter how idiosyncratic,
what does the University lose?
In Steven, it loses one of the fine apologists for our religion.
As an invited speaker at conferences in Jerusalem, Baltimore,
the former Soviet Union, and elsewhere, Steven has argued
our case eloquently. Thinking people in many parts of the
globe hold us in higher esteem as a people because he confesses
our creed. Jacob Neusner, distinguished research professor
of religious studies at the University of South Florida, begins
his review of Steven's book Mormons and Jews: Early Mormon
Theologies of Israel (Signature Books, 1992) with the words
"Brilliantly conceived and elegantly executed," and then writes
of "the doctrines Epperson lays out with the authority of
scholarship and the passion of faith. He writes with craft
and care; he speaks with humility; in the framework of his
subject and his sources, he has given us a small masterpiece"
(Sunstone, December 1994, 71-73). And he continues with an
anecdote that illustrates the service Epperson has performed
for the Church:
A personal word may prove illuminating. The first time I
lectured at Brigham Young University, my topic, Pharisaism
in the first century, spelled out in four academic lectures,
interested only a few. The question periods after each lecture
provided an exercise in practical missiology for young Mormons.
I was the designated candidate, they, the aggressive proselytizers,
and the protracted question periods, for four successive days,
concerned only, what does a Jew say to this argument? And
how can we devise a compelling answer to that negative response?
In the end I wondered why my hosts had gone to so much trouble
to bring me to undergo so sustained and demeaning a public
roast. I left with the impression that all the Mormons wanted
to know about the Jews was why we were not Mormons. When the
Mormons sought permission to build their center in Jerusalem,
I therefore took note, in the Jerusalem Post, that they have
written a long record of persistent missions to Israel, the
Jewish people, marked by an utter absence or regard for our
religion, the Torah.
But God does not leave us standing still. People change,
and God changes us. So I hasten to add that subsequent visits
to Provo have proved far more productive. . . . Epperson's
definitive work, both the historical and the theological chapters,
lays sturdy foundations for the construction of a two-way
street, one that both religious communities, each a pilgrim
people, stubborn in its faith, eternal in its quest to serve
and love God with and through intelligence (which is God's
glory), may share as they trek toward that common goal that
Israelite prophecy has defined for us all. (73)
Along with Steven's skill as apologist, we lose a talent
for thinking creatively about our own beliefs and institutions.
Consider, for example, the following depiction of the temple
and its possibilities:
The temple is a paradox, an earthly home for a transcendent
God. It cannot house his glory, yet he bids his children raise
its walls, adorn its chambers, weave its veil. For he chooses
just this place and not celestial spheres to disclose and
veil his presence among the children of Israel. Signs of fellowship
and wisdom, signs of sovereignty and orientation hewn upon
the temple's sheer face betoken the knowledge and endowment
bestowed within. Mortal hands and eyes are led by ones immortal
to frame the fearful symmetry of his form, his house, his
kingdom here on earth. We cannot place the crown upon his
kingdom -- cannot bind all wounds, sate all hunger, pacify
all violence, wipe away all tears. Yet he bids, he demands
a realm of equity and justice, now, from our flawed hearts
and feeble hands.
The House of the Lord is the matrix for the kingdom of God
on earth. The temple transmutes city and wilderness: it pursues
neither Eden, nor the heavenly Jerusalem. It sanctions neither
a naive return to a romanticized past, nor the negation of
the sensuous present, the real, for an abstract future. Rather,
by a mysterious alchemy conjured through the conjunction of
words from an improbable rite, it would bridge the rift between
parents and children, the whole estranged family of Adam and
Eve, and it would establish Enoch's city here, in this world,
through unnumbered acts of charity and justice. (Dialogue,
Fall 1987, p. 140.)
We lose, in addition, a fine critical eye. Steven recently
published, for example, at the invitation of the editor of
BYU Studies, a review essay of Robert Millett's and Joseph
McConkie's Our Destiny: The Call and Election of the House
of Israel (SLC: Bookcraft, 1993), a review that will help
us, if we listen, move beyond morally ambiguous patterns of
accepted thought. Steven points out, for instance, that
. . . . the authors contend that since "literal blood descent"
from Abraham delivers "the right to the gospel, the priesthood,
and the glories of eternal life," "rights" by blood descent
are crucial for the exercise of legitimate authority to establish
and maintain the Church. They claim that such authority is
rooted securely, since the church's early leaders "were all
of one stock," sharing with Joseph Smith a "pure . . . blood
strain from Ephraim"; they are "pure-blooded Israelite[s]."
This teaching, they assert, is to be taken literally; it is
"neither myth nor metaphor." ("Some Problems with Supersessionism
in Mormon Thought," BYU Studies V. 34, No. 4, 1994-1995, 132)
He then demonstrates that such assertions of pure blood
lines are biological nonsense and points out that when the
authors cite William J. Cameron as an authority and a "wise
man," they are associating themselves with the thought and
person of the editor of Henry Ford's Dearborn Independent,
a virulently anti-Semitic weekly, with a man who was subsequently
the editor of Destiny, the publication of the anti-Semitic
Anglo-Saxon Federation of America. Cameron maintained, Epperson
writes, "that Jesus `was not a Jew. And the Jews, as we know
them, are not the true sons of Israel. It was the Anglo-Saxons
who descended from the ten lost tribes of Israel'" (133).
The review ends with a question: "Is it possible that, just
when the LDS community is emerging from ethnic, linguistic,
and geographical parochialism to become a world-wide religion,
that Our Destiny would unwittingly turn us back?" Millett
and McConkie had the opportunity to defend themselves, so
this was no one-sided polemic. (And in fact, Steven received
a letter from Salt Lake lawyer Oscar McConkie threatening
legal action for having supposedly called Joseph McConkie
racist.) Rather it was the kind of activity you hope university
professors will engage in; for in the give and take of discussion
ideas are sharpened and deepened and revealed for what they
are.
Epperson was hired at BYU, in part, because of the quality
of his book Mormons and Jews, which won the Mormon History
Association's 1993 Francis Chipman Award for Best First Book
and, in an earlier form, the MHA's William Grover and Winifred
Foster Reese Best Dissertation Award. In the Fall of 1995,
Steven underwent a routine third-year review in which departmental,
college, and university committees judged whether he was making
the progress in citizenship, teaching, and scholarship required
of an assistant professor. During the process, the orthodoxy
and quality of Mormons and Jews became the crucial questions
in evaluating Steven as a professor, even though the book
had been disallowed for consideration as productive scholarship
during Steven's three trial years because it had been published
prior to his arrival at BYU. Academic Vice President Alan
Wilkins, after an hour-long discussion of the book's orthodoxy
with Steven, asked "What would you do if the General Authorities
asked you to suppress this, not to teach it, to recant? If
they declared that this work wasn't doctrinally sound?" Steven
replied that "that is their prerogative; they determine what
is doctrinal for the Church. That's not what I do. I don't
claim or teach this as doctrine. But I have done a professional
job of recovering and re-presenting to readers what is in
the historical record."
In late September 1996, nearly half a year after the results
of other third-year reviews were announced, James Gordon asked
Steven if he could send copies of the book to two outside
reviewers for evaluation, and Steven agreed. Two weeks later,
however, the evaluation was cut short with the letter announcing
that Steven's bishop would not judge him temple worthy. Because
of the six-month delay, Steven lost crucial time in the search
for another academic position.
Steven Epperson's case is serious enough if it stands alone.
But there are professors and staff members in every department
of the University whose lives are under scrutiny at the moment,
whose years of devoted and skillful service are being discounted
under the new ecclesiastical endorsement policy. And if, for
various reasons -- perhaps feeling themselves victims of unrighteous
dominion, out of pride, from sheer obstinacy -- they refuse
to comply to whatever their particular bishop requires, however
arbitrarily, we lose their services. I am not arguing for
leniency for rapists and thieves and plagiarists. BYU has
routinely fired staff, faculty, and administrators caught
in acts of moral turpitude. No matter what their skills, a
morally solvent institution cannot afford to have such people
around.
That is not, however, what is at stake here. The question
is why the behaviors that we require of all members of our
community, the laws by which we judge one another good or
bad, must proliferate as they have. Why must we raise peccadillos
to mortal sins? We would all agree that an absolute requirement
against murder is in all our best interests and that it is
appropriate to force one another not to murder. The consequences
of a murder so far outweigh any benefits of free agency that
we simply outlaw it.
But what about the cases of occasional church attendance
or sporadic tithe paying? There are obvious spiritual benefits
to paying tithing, to take the latter example; and a Church
university all of whose faculty and staff pay tithing may
be an especially fine place. The sweetness of that utopia
diminishes, however, when compliance is forced. As opposed
to a case of murder, the claims of free agency weigh heavy
here.
No, one may argue, we are firing people who don't pay tithing
or go to church so that we may employ only people who want
to do so. And our new interviewing and screening procedures
are aimed at ensuring such voluntary compliance; we are justified
in our current practice of turning away for positions candidates
who have current temple recommends but who, for some reason,
have gone without a recommend previously. My answer is that
you simply cannot ensure voluntary compliance. You can't even
ensure involuntary compliance for that matter, for there are
some bishops who refuse to play this spiritually destructive
game. But "ensure" and "voluntary" don't belong in the same
sentence. Remember the old joke about free agency and how
to enforce it? You can kick out some of the students who wear
shorts above the knee and thus force most of the others to
wear longer shorts. You can fire faculty members who, for
whatever reasons, don't go to church enough to satisfy their
bishop and thus put the fear of ecclesiastical non-endorsement
into their colleagues. But why would you want to do that?
Trust, President Hinkley reminded members of the BYU community
on 13 October 1992, comes from the top down.
So, to review my argument: 1. If forced compliance to proliferating
policies has little spiritual benefit to the individual or
to the university; and 2. if the principle of free agency
(over which the war in Heaven was fought) is of extreme importance
both to individuals and to the university; then 3. in all
cases of transgression except those so egregious that we would
all see them as unacceptable, the transgressor might receive
charitable counsel but ought never to be coerced to be "good"
(by expulsion from school, if a student, or by firing from
a job, if staff or faculty). "Teach them correct principles,
and let them govern themselves," said our founding Prophet.
Do we not believe him? And why do we ignore the clear words
of Jesus Christ? "Ye blind guides, which strain at a gnat,
and swallow a camel" (Matt. 23:24).
Scott Abbott
Sunstone, February 1997
APPENDIX
LETTER FROM STEVEN EPPERSON TO HIS COLLEAGUES
My dear colleagues:
I have been informed by University administrators that my
contract will not be renewed after its expiration in August,
1997. The immediate cause cited for that decision is my failure
to obtain, over a reasonable period, the letter of ecclesiastical
endorsement which we all must now secure annually in order
to remain employed at BYU. It is, I believe, an unfortunate
decision. But I will not appeal it or seek to have it set
aside. Six months of interviews have served only to disclose
how differently my bishop and I perceive my stewardship as
husband, father, and priesthood holder. Six months of meetings
have only disclosed how willing University administrators
are to grant local ecclesiastical leaders inordinate power
to determine who works and who does not work for this institution.
I cannot imagine, as a condition for employment, submitting
annually to the intrusive scrutiny of my private family life
mandated by this ill-conceived policy.
It is very important to me, no matter what disagreements
there may be between us on this policy issue, that all of
you understand how appreciative I am of the confidence and
fellowship you extended to me three and a half years ago when
you voted to welcome me as a member of this department. I
have never taken that trust lightly; I treasure it to this
day. I hope only that you will not feel that your good will
was mis-placed. When I signed my letter of appointment in
1993, I had every expectation that my stay at BYU would be
an enduring and productive one. I am sorry and disappointed,
keenly disappointed, that my stay here will be so brief.
I sincerely wish all of you the very best of success in
your research, teaching, and service here. We have a marvelous
body of students-intelligent, well-meaninged, curious and
decent-who need excellent teachers/scholars/saints to assist
in their pursuit of knowledge and wisdom. May we be equal
to them.
The contract I signed in July is good for the academic year
1996-97. I look forward to our continued professional and
personal associations through this year and beyond.
Sincerely,
Steven Epperson
Department of History
|
3. Notes on BYU's 1992 Academic Freedom Statment and Related
Policies.
|
Drafted by B. W. Jorgensen, Associate Professor of English
BYU Chapter, AAUP, January 1997.
- The Statement appeals to the 1940 AAUP Statement
on Academic Freedom and Tenure, yet seems to ignore the
AAUP's 1970 "Interpretive Comments," especially comment
3: "Most church-related institutions no longer need or desire
the departure from the principle of academic freedom implied
in the 1940 Statement, and we do not now endorse such a
departure."
- BYU's statement is "grounded on a distinction, often blurred
but vital and historically based, between individual and
institutional academic freedom," and attempts to balance
the sometimes conflicting claims of these two freedoms.
- The Statement grounds individual academic freedom on the
LDS scriptural principle of "individual agency" or "moral
agency," concluding that "neither testimony, nor righteousness,
nor genuine understanding is possible unless it is freely
discovered and voluntarily embraced." Elsewhere the Statement
reminds us that "There is no such thing as risk-free genuine
education, just as according to LDS theology there is no
risk-free earthly experience." Individual academic freedom
is defined as a faculty member's right "'to teach and research
without interference,' to ask hard questions, to subject
answers to rigorous examination, and to engage in scholarship
and creative work," and includes "the traditional right
to publish or present the results of original research in
the reputable scholarly literature and professional conferences
of one's academic discipline." The Statement declares BYU's
aspiration "to be a host for th[e] integrated search for
truth by offering a unique enclave of inquiry, where teachers
and students may seek learning 'even by study and also by
faith.'" Citing prophetic and scriptural texts, the "scope
of integration" is given as "in principle, as wide as truth
itself," since "the gospel . . . affirms the full range
of human modes of knowing." And in "summary" the Statement
declares that "BYU students and their parents are entitled
to expect an educational experience that reflects this aspiration."
- Nearly twice as long, the discussion of "institutional
academic freedom" includes some fourteen footnotes citing
recent analyses of academic freedom in religious institutions,
and especially a number of articles on the "death" or "decline"
of "religious higher education." The sponsors and writers
of the Statement seem more anxious to define and defend
"institutional academic freedom" than "individual academic
freedom," perhaps because they felt the former was insufficiently
understood.
- The "definition" of this freedom in BYU's case is that
"BYU claims the right to maintain [its] identity by the
appropriate exercise of its institutional academic freedom,"
which is "the privilege of universities to pursue their
distinctive missions" or to "guarantee institutional autonomy."
BYU's "identity" consists in its being "wholly owned by
the Church," its mainly LDS faculty and student body, its
Honor Code, and the contract stipulation that LDS faculty
are "expected . . . to 'live lives of loyalty to the restored
gospel.'" The Statement acknowledges that "It is not expected
that the faculty will agree on every point of doctrine,
much less on the issues in the academic disciplines that
divide faculties in any unversity," and cautions that "It
is expected . . . that a spirit of Christian charity and
common faith in the gospel will unite even those with wide
differences and that questions will be raised in ways that
seek to strengthen rather than undermine faith."
- The discussion of "institutional academic freedom" stresses
the institution's right to preserve its identity and pursue
its mission (without outside interference); yet the main
challenge to BYU's institutional academic freedom seems
to be its faculty. Thus the Statment argues that "absolute
individual [academic] freedom would place the individual
faculty member effectively in charge of defining institutional
purpose, thereby infringing on prerogatives that traditionally
belong to boards, administrations, and faculty councils."
But how "would" faculty ever "defin[e] institutional purpose,"
except as faculty always do, via syllabi, assignments, tests,
texts, lectures, discussions, and critiques of students'
work? How could faculty be limited in this normal influence
on institutional purpose, unless boards and administrators
performed faculty duties?
- Clearly one primary area of concern is "disagreement [on]
Church doctrine, on which BYU's Board of Trustees claims
the right to convey prophetic counsel." Apparently a faculty
member might, by somehow opposing or violating "doctrine,"
commit an "arrogation of authority" and "defin[e] institutional
purpose" in a way contrary to what the Board desires. It
appears that institutional purpose includes the inculcation
of orthodox belief by preventing faculty from disagreeing
with the Board on "doctrine" and by reserving to the Board
the prerogative of defining what "doctrine" shall include.
It would be helpful for the Statement to indicate more fully
and precisely what is considered "Church doctrine." Different
aspects of "doctrine" would likely pertain to different
disciplines; and faculty may be unaware of which statements
or positions that pertain to their fields are considered
"Church doctrine."
- The Statement declares that there cannot be "unlimited
institutional academic freedom," yet effectively makes that
freedom unlimited in the (undefined) area of "Church doctrine,"
which includes matters of the deepest personal, communal,
and cultural consequence, and in which, if anywhere, individuals
should most "freely discover and voluntarily embrace" truth.
- The Statement's "reasonable limitations," applying "when
the behavior or expression seriously and adversely affects
the university mission or the Church," reinforce this sense
of unlimited institutional freedom. After its first sentence,
this section of the Statement applies "limitation" only
to individual academic freedom. It gives three "Examples"
of "expression with students or in public." First, expression
which "contradicts or opposes, rather than analyzes or discusses,
fundamental Church doctrine or policy": this notably qualifies
"doctrine" with "fundamental," yet without clarifying what
that term means; it noticeably avoids the word "criticise"
or any phrase like "ask hard questions," and faculty may
wonder where the line will be drawn between "analyze" and
"contradict." Second, expression which "deliberately attacks
or derides the Church or its general leaders": it is not
clear whether this makes the words or ideas of general Church
leaders immune from critical discussion, even when those
words or ideas are not (or seem not to be) about "fundamental
. . . doctrine or policy." The third "example," expression
that "violates the Honor Code because [it] is dishonest,
illegal, unchaste, profane, or unduly disrespectful of others,"
offers no criteria for determining when expression falls
within at least some of these categories. Without more precise
guidelines, or much open discussion, faculty may feel themselves
vulnerable to the "determination of harm," despite their
most scrupulous efforts to avoid it. The institution's freedom
to determine harm by such general and undefined categories
as the Statement offers, seems unlimited or absolute.
- The policy declares individual academic freedom to be
"presumptive," institutional intervention "exceptional,"
yet it effectively makes the latter absolute in the clause
which reserves "ultimate responsibility to determine harm"
to the administration and Board of Trustees, without indicating
any criteria for determining harm, or any obligation on
the administration or Board to demonstrate that harm has
been done. There are no visible safeguards in the policy
against a single member of the Board "determining harm"
and threatening a faculty member's position.
- University Policy on Faculty Rank and Status requires
University officials to "spell out in detail" the "terms
and conditions" of all "offers" of faculty positions and
"not to make or imply any oral commitments regarding employment,
rank, salary, or work conditions" (2.9). Assuming "work
conditions" to include any and all constraints on faculty
activity, does not this policy oblige the University to
spell out rather fully, in advance and in writing, those
areas or kinds of research, creative work, and teaching
which it does regard as "adverse" to the interests of the
church and the university?
- The policy and procedures for handling complaints against
faculty which are sent to General Authorities are internally
incoherent and serve to perpetuate the very practices which
they ostensibly discourage. That is, if this sort of "offense"
is to be dealt with at the lowest possible level, it does
not make sense to involve all the intervening levels, from
General Authority to Commissioner to President to Dean to
Chair, by sending the complaints down through those channels.
With anonymous letters (which history shows to be often
vicious), the policy guarantees that the whole weight of
the Church and university hierarchy will be brought to bear
on the target of the attack, while preserving the anonymity
of the accuser.
B[ruce]. W. Jorgensen
3183 JKHB
English Department
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602-6280
Telephone: (801) 378-3205
|
4. Information on the BYU Visit of the
National AAUP Investigative Team |
January 29, 1997
Report On The BYU Campus Visit By The National AAUP Investigative
Committee
At the request of BYU's chapter of the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP), a panel of investigators appointed
by the national AAUP came to the BYU campus this past week to
examine issues of academic freedom at BYU. The panel spent Thursday
January 23 through Saturday January 25 in Provo.
Long-time AAUP members and officers, Linda Pratt, Chair
of the English Department at the University of Nebraska and
Bill Heywood, Emeritus Professor of History at Cornell College
met with more than 120 people while on campus.
The investigative committee heard from a wide range of BYU
staff including administrators President Merrill Bateman,
Alan Wilkins, Jim Gordon, and John Tanner; Professor Gail
Houston; the authors of BYU's Statement on Academic Freedom;
the present and past chairs of the Faculty Women's Association;
approximately thirty-five faculty members and students who
responded to the invitation for public discussion; Professor
Houston's appeal panel; the 1995-1996 University Faculty Council
on Rank and Status; administrators from the College of Humanities;
and panels organized by the BYU AAUP Chapter working with
the BYU administration dealing with Women and Academic Freedom,
Hiring, Retention, Advancement, and Censorship.
The BYU AAUP chapter attempted to ensure that the national
committee heard from all sides of the academic freedom issue
at BYU. We scheduled every faculty and staff person and student
who voiced interest by Wednesday afternoon for discussion
with the committee. Beyond that, several late-comers were
able to speak as well.
Representatives of our chapter also invited the BYU administration
to provide us with a list of persons they wanted to talk with
the committee. To the best of our knowledge, the investigative
committee heard from every person on the administration's
list. The meetings were professional and cordial as the committee
gathered pertinent information.
Many who testified felt they were doing so at some risk
to themselves, but felt it was important they be heard. A
wide variety of opinion was expressed, and many individual
stories were told. If any members of the BYU community have
continuing interest in the process, they are invited to submit
written comments to the AAUP investigative committee.
We have been asked repeatedly about what happens next. The
national committee, which listened to involved parties and
collected written documents, will now prepare a report on
academic freedom at BYU. This report will be submitted to
BYU officials for comment.
If the report suggests problems with academic freedom issues
at BYU, we envision several possible outcomes. For example,
the BYU administration and faculty could further refine the
academic freedom document; instigate a program to clarify
and make adjustments to the grievance process; further refine
policies and procedures; etc.
In the event serious problems with academic freedom are
found and our administration is unable to work out such problems
with the AAUP, the possibility exists of a formal censure.
We sincerely hope that this does not happen, for it would
put us in the company of such academically peripheral institutions
as Southwestern Adventist College (Texas), Southern Nazarene
University (Oklahoma), Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary
(North Carolina), University of Bridgeport, Stevens Institute
of Technology (New Jersey), and Garland County Community College
(Arkansas).
Good institutions are censured by the AAUP from time to
time for single incidents (USC and NYU are currently on the
list). Historically such universities work quickly and intensely
to have the censure lifted, for the academic reputation and
prestige of a college or university is at stake.
BYU is a fine university that over the years has developed
a reputation for academic excellence in the context of religious
faith. Members of our local AAUP chapter have been proud to
make contributions to that reputation. We believe that our
actions at this time continue to serve students and faculty
at BYU, as well as the Church at large. Our opposition to
current academic freedom policies, in short, is a loyal opposition.
We will be a better university if we operate within a context
of respect for and trust of multiple points of view.
Our BYU chapter has no disagreement with the proposition
that a religious university should have the opportunity to
suggest certain limitations to academic freedom. Our belief,
however, is that such limitations must be narrow, well defined
and clearly communicated. Furthermore, the limitations must
be understood from the outset of employment. We do not feel
these conditions have been met recently at BYU.
Finally, our local chapter wants to thank the BYU administration
and individual professors and students who made the recent
visit of the national AAUP investigative committee successful.
Contact persons (Members of the Board of Directors of the
BYU Chapter of the AAUP):
Scott Abbott; 378-3207
Bill Evenson; 378-6078
Susan Howe 378-2363
Duane Jeffery 378-2155
Sam Rushforth; 378-2438
Brandie Siegfried 378- 8106
|
5. Gail Houston; Pertinent Information
and Documents Relevant to Houston's Tenure Denial |
The BYU Chapter of the AAUP and the National AAUP is seeking
more information concerning Gail Turley Houston's Tenure Denial
at Brigham Young University. The following documents are pertinent
to this investigation. [Gail näyttää nykyään
olevan New Mexicon yliopiston palveluksessa. suom.huom. 2000-11]
|
A Letter from the National AAUP to Gail Houston, August
15, 1996 Discussing Houston's Firing
|
August 15, 1996
Professor Gail Turley Houston
105l Fir Avenue
Provo, Utah 84604
Dear Professor Houston:
We have examined the abundant written material that you
and our AAUP chapter have shared with us regarding the decision
not to grant you continuing faculty status at Brigham Young
University. Our paramount interest in this kind of situation,
as I am sure you know, relates to academic freedom, both the
impact on your own academic freedom and the climate for academic
freedom at the institution on whose faculty you have served.
Our reading has left us with a very deep sense of concern,
much of it already enunciated in the communications that the
AAUP chapter submitted to President Bateman on June 27. Noting
that a hearing on your appeal against the decision of the
President and the Provost is still to occur but is scheduled
for the immediate future, we think it appropriate to await
the result of that hearing before, assuming the decision stands,
conveying our concern directly to the chief administrative
officers and inviting their response. Meanwhile, I want to
provide you and our chapter officers with a preliminary assessment
of the very troublesome issues of academic freedom that your
case poses to us. I shall refer, not in any order of relative
importance, to four such issues.
First, the available evidence strongly suggests that the
university administration, while allowing the offering of
courses dealing with feminism and postmodernism, and while
engaging faculty members such as yourself who specialize in
these areas, determined tnat your services should be terminated
not because of any significant deficiency in your widely praised
academic performance but because some few found your handling
of the subject matter offensive to the teachings or traditions
of the university's sponsoring church regarding the role of
women in society.
Second, following positive recommendations based on your
academic record on your candidacy for continuing status from
your department and your college committees and administrators,
the University Faculty Council on Rank and Status evidently
rejected your candidacy on grounds of "citizenship," focusing
on questions about your religious beliefs and orthodoxy that
most would see as private and personal and simply not the
business of persons charged with evaluating academic performance.
This seems to us an especially troublesome concern for academic
freedom in the case of someone, like yourself, who has reportedly
been judged temple worthy and otherwlse in good standing by
your responsible ecclesiastical superiors in your church.
Third, with respect to the 1940 Statement of Principles
on Academic freedom and Tenure and its premise that there
can be limitations on academic freedom and tenure because
of the institution's religious aims provided that the limits
are set forth in writing, the authors of that document--university
professors and university presidents--emphasized at the outset
that any stated limitations must be narrowly crafted and precise.
The limitations discussed in the Brigham Young University
statement on academic freedom strike us as very far from precise,
and we do not see them as notifying you adequately of parameters
on your academic freedom in the areas or incidents in which
shortcomings by you were subsequently alleged.
Fourth, there seem, after all, to have been a total of three
incidents during your years on the faculty in which you said
or did something publicly that later was cited as ground for
concern about your "citizenship" in assessing your fitness
for continuance on the faculty: what you wrote for Student
Review. your Sunstone presentation, and the "White Roses"
event (all of these dating back three or more years). Whether
or not you may have crossed the line regarding the Bngham
Young University expectations of adherence to academic freedom
limitations in any of these incidents, if there was a transgression
it seems to us to have been exceedingly slight. The finding
of the University Faculty Council on Rank and Status, apparently
endorsed by the administration, that these activities by you
"not only have . . . failed to strengthen the moral vigor
of the university, they have enervated its very fiber" tells
us that the university administration's willingness and ability
to stand up for academic freedom is weak indeed.
Please continue to keep us informed.
Sincerely,
Jordan E. Kurland
JEK:em
cc: Professor Scott Abbott, President
AAUP Chapter
|
A Letter from the BYU AAUP to Merrill Bateman, September
24, 1996, Outlining our Concerns about the Houston Case and
Seeking an Investigation from the National AAUP
|
24 September 1996
Dr. Merrill J. Bateman
President, Brigham Young University
D-346 ASB
Provo, Utah 84602-1346
Dear President Bateman:
The BYU Chapter of the American Association of University
Professors is concerned with the recent firing of Professor
GailTurley Houston. We had hoped the decision would be reversed
either by the appeal panel or by you. Apparently members of
the panel were sympathetic to many of the arguments made in
Prof. Houston's behalf, but the University advocate asked
the panel to rule only on whether proper procedures had been
followed. Our Chapter is convinced that procedures were indeed
violated (as pointed out in previous correspondence) but that
is not the main purpose of this letter.
Our main concern here is with the arguments made about violations
of Prof. Houston's academic freedom--large issues that include
misrepresentations and misunderstandings of feminist and postmodern
theory. We are discouraged with the atmosphere for faculty
and staff at BYU, particularly for women. Likewise, we take
issue with growing restrictions on scholarship and teaching
at BYU.
After a review of many of the relevant documents, a representative
of our national organization offered the following preliminary
evaluation of the situation:
August 15, 1996
Dear Professor Houston:
We have examined the abundant written material that you
and our AAUP chapter have shared with us regarding the decision
not to grant you continuing faculty status at Brigham Young
University. . . . I want to provide you and our chapter
officers with a preliminary assessment of the very troublesome
issues of academic freedom that your cases poses to us.
I shall refer, not in any order of relative importance,
to four such issues.
First, the available evidence strongly suggests that the
university administration, while allowing the offering of
courses dealing with feminism and postmodernism, and while
engaging faculty members such as yourself who specialize
in these areas, determined that your services should be
terminated not because of any significant deficiency in
your widely praised academic performance but because some
few found your handling of the subject matter offensive
to the teachings or traditions of the university's sponsoring
church regarding the role of women in society.
Second, following positive recommendations based on your
academic record on your candidacy for continuing status
from your department and your college committees and administrators,
the University Faculty council on Rank and Status evidently
rejected your candidacy on grounds of "citizenship," focusing
on questions about your religious beliefs and orthodoxy
that most would see as private and personal and simply not
the business of persons charged with evaluating academic
performance. This seems to us an especially troublesome
concern for academic freedom in the case of someone, like
yourself, who has reportedly been judged "temple worthy"
and otherwise in good standing by your responsible ecclesiastical
superiors in your church.
Third, with respect to the 1940 'Statement of Principles
on Academic Freedom and Tenure' and its premise that there
can be limitations on academic freedom and tenure because
of the institution's religious aims provided that the limits
are set forth in writing, the authors of that document --
university professors and university presidents -- emphasized
at the outset that any stated limitations must be narrowly
crafted and precise. The limitations discussed in the BYU
statement on academic freedom strike us as very far from
precise, and we do not see them as notifying you adequately
of parameters on your academic freedom in the areas or incidents
in which shortcomings by you were subsequently alleged.
Fourth, there seem, after all, to have been a total of
three incidents during your years on the faculty in which
you said or did something publicly that later was cited
as ground for concern about your "citizenship" in assessing
your fitness for continuance on the faculty: what you wrote
for Student Review, your Sunstone presentation, and the
"White Roses" event (all of these dating back three or more
years). Whether or not you may have crossed the line regarding
the BYU expectations of adherence to academic freedom limitations
in any of the mentioned incidents, if there was a transgression
it seems to us to have been exceedingly slight. The finding
of the University Faculty Council on Rank and Status, apparently
endorsed by the administration, that these activities by
you 'not only have . . .failed to strengthen the moral vigor
of the university, they have enervated its very fiber' tells
us that the university administration's willingness and
ability to stand up for academic freedom is weak indeed.
. . .
Sincerely,
Jordan E. Kurland
Associate General Secretary of the AAUP
The members of our Chapter concur with this evaluation and are
committed to bringing about more open and tolerant conditions
at BYU. We wish to work with colleagues and the administration
to recreate an atmosphere in which discussion is possible, scholarship
is encouraged, trust is a matter of course, and the principles
espoused in our "Statement on Academic Freedom" are adhered
to.
As pointed out in the University Self Study and in the accreditation
report of the Commission on Colleges of the Northwest Association
of Schools and Colleges, there are serious problems here with
faculty and staff morale. A series of apparently harsh and
unfair decisions on tenure and promotion, including most recently
Prof. Houston's case, has affected that morale substantially.
Further, our reputation as an academic institution has begun
to fall as we take actions clearly in conflict with accepted
and proven academic practice. As a result, departments are
finding it ever more difficult to hire new faculty, early
retirements are increasing, and tenured and untenured faculty
are taking jobs elsewhere. We must take action to reverse
that trend.
In this spirit, we have decided to ask the National AAUP
to more thoroughly review Professor Houston's firing. We believe
it is in the best interest of the university to obtain the
opinion of an impartial external organization whose main purpose
is to further academic freedom at colleges and universities
across the country. We have no punitive goal in mind. But
we are committed as a group and as individuals to the long-term
health and flourishing of BYU. Many of us have been here for
our entire careers and want nothing more than to see BYU reach
its full potential as a university with deep religious commitments.
This is possible only if we foster a rigorous ethical and
academic standard in fact and not only in theory. So, we will
continue to work for the advancement of our institution.
Sincerely,
Members of the BYU Chapter of the AAUP
cc Jordan E. Kurland, AAUP
|
A Letter from the National AAUP to Merrill Bateman, October
1, 1996 outlining Concerns Relating to Houston's Firing and
Asking for Information from BYU
|
October 1, 1996
Dr. Merrill J. Bateman
President
Brigham Young University
D-346 ASB
P.O. Box 21346
Provo, Utah 84602-1346
Dear President Bateman:
Dr. Gail Turley Houston, who has served as Assistant Professor
of English at Brigham Young University, has sought the advice
and assistance of the American Association of University Professors
as a result of the letter of June 5, 1996, signed by the Associate
Academic Vice President, the Dean of her College, and the
Chair of her Department, informing her that the President
and provost had decided against granting her continuing faculty
status. We understand that Professor Houston appealed the
decision to an appointed panel and that by letter of September
11 you informed her that you had accepted the panel's recommendation
that the decision be sustained.
The interest of this Association in Professor Houston's
case -- requested also by the Brigham Young AAUP chapter officers
as indicated in their letter to you of September 24 -- stems
from our longstanding commitment to academic freedom and tenure.
The basic tenets are enunciated in the enclosed State of Principles
on Academic Freedom and Tenure, coauthored by the AAUP and
the Association of American Colleges and Universities and
endorsed by over 150 professional organizations and learned
societies. Derivative standards applicable to probationary
faculty members are set forth in AAUP's enclosed Statement
on Procedural Standards in the Renewal or Nonrenewal of Faculty
Appointments. Also relevant are Regulation 9 ("Academic Freedom
and Protection against Discrimination") and Regulation 10
("Complaints of Violation of Academic Freedom or of Discrimination
in Nonreappointment") in our enclosed Recommended Institutional
Regulations on Academic Freedom and tenure. We are familiar
with Brigham Young University's University Policy on Faculty
Rank and Status: Professorial.
***
We wish, first to address a key concern with respect to procedure.
As you know, Professor Houston was recommended for continuing
status (or indefinite tenure) by the English Department, by
its Chair, by the College Committee on Rank and Status, and
by the Dean of the College. The University Council on Rank
and Status, however, recommended against continuing status
for Professor Houston, essentially on the grounds of "citizenship";
the Academic Vice President concurred, and you and the provost
acted in accordance with the negative recommendation.
In moving to contest the decision, Professor Houston alleged
that it resulted from considerations violative of her academic
freedom and that it constituted discrimination against her
on the basis of sex. Under the enclosed AAUP-supported standards,
she should have been afforded opportunity to have these allegations
heard by an elected faculty body and potentially in an adjudicative
hearing of record. By contrast, Professor Houston's appeal
was directed to an administration-appointed panel of five
persons, three of them administrators including the panel's
chair. In his pre-hearing response to Professor Houston's
appeal, the administration's representative did not squarely
address her complaints regarding academic freedom and discrimination,
asserting that "the only issue before this panel is the reasonableness
of the President's decision." In its recommendation that the
decision be upheld, the panel, except for stating that its
considerations included "more general concerns about the environment
for women faculty on campus," also did not address the issues
of academic freedom and discrimination. Professor Houston's
allegations thus seem to have gone unrebutted and untested
at the university.
***
With respect to discrimination issues, we understand that
on September 23 Professor Houston filed a complaint with the
Utah Industrial Commission's Anti-Discrimination Division.
Several additional complaints involving women at BYU have
been brought to our attention over the last year or two. Suffice
it for now for us to remark that we wonder whether the result
for Professor Houston, were she not a woman, would have been
the same.
With respect to academic freedom issues, the AAUP chapter's
September 24 letter to you includes the preliminary assessment
that I sent to the chapter and to Professor Houston on August
15. A copy of the August 15 letter is enclosed for your convenience.
We subsequently examined voluminous documentation that went
into the record of Professor Houston's appeal, and nothing
that we have read leads us to modify our comments on the four
areas of concern that we addressed. We would very much welcome
having the university administration's response to these concerns,
and any other information you can provide that would add to
our understanding of the decision to deny Professor Houston
continuing faculty status, as we proceed to determine our
further responsibilties in the matter.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Sincereley,
Jordan E. Kurland
Associate General Secretary, AAUP
|
Article from the October 25, 1996 "Daily Herald" on the
National AAUP Seeking Response from BYU on the Firing of Gail
Houston
|
BYU Group Asks For Investigation
By MARK EDDINGTON
The Daily Herald October 25, 1996
A professional faculty association at Brigham Young University
is calling for an outside review of academic freedom at the
Mormon Church-owned school.
Members of the BYU chapter of the American Association of
University Professors have asked their parent organization
to investigate the university's decision in June to deny continuing
status to assistant English Professor Gail Houston.
A report of alleged violations of academic freedom at BYU
has been supplied by faculty to the national organization,
which has asked university President Merrill J. Bateman for
an explanation of Houston's dismissal and other issues raised
by the local AAUP chapter.
Houston, who now teaches at the University of New Mexico,
was denied tenure in June for allegedly contradicting fundamental
Mormon doctrine and attacking The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints for its views on women.
In September, a five-member appeals panel composed of two
associate academic vice presidents and three faculty members
upheld Houston's dismissal by Bateman, who acted on the recommendation
of the University Faculty Council on Rank and Status.
But the AAUP believes the university's action and subsequent
appeals process was fraught with problems. In a Sept. 24 letter
to Bateman, a copy of which was obtained by The Daily Herald,
local chapter members say BYU violated procedure and Houston's
academic freedom.
AAUP members contend in the letter that the appeals panel
was improperly limited to a review of whether proper procedure
was followed in Houston's case and was not allowed to address
the substantive issues she raised about gender discrimination
and an overall hostile environment toward women at BYU.
"We are discouraged with the atmosphere for faculty and
staff at BYU, particularly for women," AAUP members told Bateman
in the letter. "Likewise, we take issue with growing restrictions
on scholarship and teaching at BYU."
Chapter members further state in the letter that they believe
it is in the best interest of BYU to get the opinion of the
national AAUP, an impartial organization dedicated to the
furthering of academic freedom at colleges and universities
throughout the country.
But Jim Gordon, BYU associate academic vice president, disputes
any suggestion of impropriety by the university. He said the
appeals panel was fair and weighed both arguments about alleged
procedural errors and the merits of Houston's dismissal before
recommending Bateman's original decision be sustained.
l "BYU is very open about what its standards are," Gordon
said. "The university holds everyone to the same standard.
The problem was not that she was treated differently, but
that she chose to violate those standards by contradicting
fundamental church doctrines and attacking the church."
Among Houston's more egregious errors, as far as BYU is
concerned, was her open admission of praying to a Heavenly
Mother and alleged support for the right to reject church
prophets' and priesthood leaders' pronouncements on the role
of women. In addition, the administration took issue with
her expressing agreement with individuals who had been excommunicated
by the church for apostasy.
Despite those accusations, Houston has steadfastly maintained
her loyalty to the church and university. She accuses the
university of violating her academic freedom and of having
a hostile attitude toward women in general and her in particular.
"It's really very sad to see the oppressive atmosphere that
is taking place at BYU." she said.
While making no definitive ruling on Houston's case, the
national AAUP has expressed support. In an Aug. 15 Ietter
to Houston, a copy of which was provided to Bateman, AAUP
Associate General Secretary Jordan Kurland said her case suggests
that she was dismissed "not because of any significant deficiency"
in academic performance, but because of her handling of church
teachings on the role of women in society.
Kurland stated in the letter that a person's religious beliefs
are not the business of those who judge academic performance.
He further said the limits BYU places on academic freedom
are imprecise and out of harmony with the AAUP's 1940 declaration
on the principle of academic freedom.
"The finding of the University Faculty Council on Rank and
Status, apparently endorsed by the administration, ... tells
us that the university administration's willingness and ability
to stand up for academic freedom is weak indeed," Kurland
wrote.
The disagreement over Houston's firing underscores the tension
between the administration and BYU's chapter of the AAUP which
has about 50 members. Organized in spring 1995 after a 21-year
absence on campus, the BYU chapter has been unsuccessful in
its repeated attempts to meet with Bateman. The president
has thus far elected to respond to members as individuals,
rather than recognize them as a group.
AAUP members at BYU, at BYU as well as some who do not belong
to the organization, believe there has been a systematic erosion
of academic freedom and a general climate of fear on campus
over the past five years. As evidence, they cite BYU's new
policy that requires ecclesiastical leaders to inform the
administration if BYU employees in their congregations are
worthy to enter Mormon temples.
Concern has also been expressed about BYU's treatment of
feminists and about the number of faculty candidates, particularly
in the English department, who have been rejected by the administration
without explanation.
|
6. Brian Evenson; Letter of Resignation
from BYU |
8/13/1996
Brian Evenson
Department of English, 205 Morrill
Oklahoma State University
Stillwater, OK 74078
Open letter addressed to Jay Fox, Chair
Department of English, 3146 JKHB
Brigham Young University
Provo, UT 84602
Dear Jay,
Though I respect many of the faculty and students at Brigham
Young, I do not feel that BYU fosters the academic freedom
and exploration which are necessary to a university environment.
Indeed, I feel that many of BYU's administrators, as well
certain members of the faculty and some of the students, are
taking action and imposing restrictions which severely stifle
academic freedom. BYU provides a climate in which academic
inquiry is not allowed unless it is restricted within unacceptably
narrow parameters. All indications suggest that these parameters
will continue to narrow.
I have very specific objections to Brigham Young University's
current policies. For instance:
--Though I do not object to temple worthiness, I object
to the way in which temple worthiness is now being enforced.
I feel the policy will lead on the one hand to hypocrisy and
on the other to the lessening of the enjoyment many BYU faculty
members will receive from attending the temple and from paying
their tithing.
--I feel that BYU creates a hostile work environment for
women: women who are scholars and women involved in cultural
studies and gender studies in particular. I feel that BYU's
harassment of the women's organization Voice-- as well as
President Bateman's and the administration's attack of the
nationwide clothesline project --show a lack of understanding
of and sympathy toward abuse. I am not willing to participate,
even passively, in the maintenance of such an environment.
--I feel that President Bateman's unwillingness to acknowledge
the AAUP Academic Freedom Association is reflective of BYU's
larger unwillingness to allow academic freedom in certain
areas.
--I believe the continuing status review process as it currently
stands is dishonest and manipulative. I feel this in particular
in Gail Houston's case, in which documents were introduced
after the departmental and college level reviews without Gail
having a chance to respond to them. I feel that faulty conclusions
were drawn --as far as I can tell purposefully. Data that
showed Gail to be a dedicated teacher and scholar, as well
as a strong spiritual support to students, was interpreted
counterproductively. I feel that if I returned to Brigham
Young I could not depend on a fair and honest continuing status
review.
--I do not feel that I can depend upon your support as a
chair. I feel that this is made clear by the way in which
you handled Gail's case.
--I have been shocked at the willingness of both President
Lee and President Bateman to make uninformed statements in
both public and private about the inappropriate nature of
my book, particularly when Lee claimed that BYU's process
would leave judgement of the book to people trained in literature.
Despite all claims made for a fair review process, the administration
has already made up its mind. In the case of both presidents,
their comments demonstrate that if they have read my book
at all, they have read it in only a cursory fashion.
--I feel that Brigham Young University has been dishonest
in regard to the anonymous letter that was sent to a general
authority criticizing my work. First I was asked to respond
to the letter and then, several months after I did so, it
was claimed that the anonymous letter was of no importance.
Later, BYU disingenuously gave the press the impression that
they had arranged for me to meet with the anonymous student
and that I even had already done so. In fact, no meeting was
ever arranged or planned, despite several requests on my part.
--I am also somewhat disappointed that though the English
Department has strong proof that a particular professor has
written letters to the General Authorities about myself and
others, and has had repeated violations of standards, nothing
has been done about him. I think it a profound weakness of
the department and of BYU in general that, though you scold
such people and warn them, you seem unwilling to fire them.
Yet you show no such compunction about releasing scholars
such as Gail Houston for reasons which are flimsy and insufficiently
substantiated at best.
All this is further complicated by the fact that a General
Authority is now the President of the University. Many Mormons
teaching at BYU believe it wrong to question the decisions
of a General Authority, and many will be unwilling to tell
him when he is making poor decisions. I think that in his
actions and decisions Merrill Bateman has demonstrated both
a willingness to further compromise academic freedom and a
lack of understanding of academics and what it takes to run
a university effectively. His comments and speeches have made
me feel that he is either uninformed or wrongly informed on
current trends in academia. I feel that under his leadership
BYU can only get worse.
I would not be proud to remain at Brigham Young University.
I am not proud of the negative reputation that the BYU English
Department is gaining in the profession at large. I am not
pleased with the way BYU treats its faculty. I feel that its
current policies and attitudes do great damage not only to
faculty but to students. For this reason, I am tendering my
resignation as an assistant professor of Brigham Young University,
effective immediately.
Sincerely,
Brian Evenson
|
7. Issues Pertinent to the Status of
Women at BYU |
The following document was prepared by a committee of the
BYU Chapter of the AAUP during the winter of 1996. This document
poses some of the problems with academic freedom for women
at BYU.
March 1996
Limitations on the Academic Freedom of Women at Brigham
Young University
Because Brigham Young University isowned and operated by
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Church's
leaders have largely determined the attitudes and practices
of the university. Those leaders, as well as the university's
administration, are all empowered men in the Mormon culture
who defines right and good by male standards. The experience
of women often calls those male-centered standards into question
as incomplete or otherwise inadequate.
As a result, Brigham Young University has a history of suppressing
scholarship and artistic expressions representing the experience
of women. The following list provides examples of some of
the ways in which university officials have acted over the
past several years to silence women faculty and staff and
suppress their scholarship. University officials imply that
their actions with regard to women are taken to ensure that
the university uphold the doctrines and standards of the LDS
Church. But the women they have silenced or punished are also
committed, faithful members of that Church (though the leaders
seem to see these women as less important than themselves).
It finally comes down to a question of the right of representation:
do Mormon women scholars have the right to represent their
own experience in their own voice, or must representations
of women and women's experience conform to a male-formulated
construct of that experience? This would seem to be an issue
of academic freedom that the Accreditation Committee might
consider significant in its evaluation of Brigham Young University.
**In 1992 the administration refused to hire candidate Barbara
Bishop for a faculty appointment in the English Department,
although she was the choice of the section, chair, and college
dean for the position and had the full support of her local
ecclesiastical leaders. At the time she even headed the Primary
(the children's organization of the LDS Church) in her ward
(congregation). The reason the administration gave for not
approving her hire was that 17 faculty members in the English
Department (of a faculty of 75) did not vote in favor of hiring
her. Bishop's scholarship dealt with the works of African
American writer Zora Neal Hurston and other American women
writers.
**In 1992, the LDS Church celebrated the sesquicentennial
of the Relief Society, the Church's organization for adult
women. In conjunction with that celebration, Professor Marie
Cornwall, then the head of the BYU Women's Research Institute,
organized a scholarly conference on the Relief Society. Because
speakers at that conference criticized as well as praised
the Relief Society, Professor Cornwall was called in and censured
by University Provost Bruce Hafen for planning this conference
and carrying it out.
**In 1992, the organizing committee of the BYU Women's Conference
chose as the keynote speaker for the 1993 conference Laurel
Thatcher Ulrich, faithful Mormon woman, recent Pulitzer Prize-winning
author of A Midwife's Tale: The Life of Martha Ballard, and
winner of a MacArthur Grant. Ulrich's book has been so significant
because she uses the twenty-year diary of Martha Ballard to
reconstruct late 18th-century New England history to include
the experiences of women. This study has made scholars of
political, economic, social, and medical history of the period
revise their conclusions and include women's contributions
in their historical research. Brigham Young University's board
of trustees did not approve Ulrich to be a speaker for the
women's conference. Although both she and her ecclesiastical
leaders tried to find out why she was not approved, she was
never given a reason.
**In 1993, the board of trustees fired the chair of the BYU
women's conference, Carol Lee Hawkins, from her position,
even though during the six years she directed the conference,
attendance almost doubled and the conference received an approval
rating from participants who completed the exit questionnaire
of over 90 percent. To explain the firing, the Board suggested
only that a change of assignment was a good thing from time
to time, as if this position were a Church assignment rather
than a paid university administrative position and Hawkins's
employment. Just after Carol Lee Hawkins was fired, a group
of women's studies faculty from across the university met
with University Provost Bruce Hafen and asked him about that
action. He answered that Hawkins had not been fired, that
she had indicated that she wanted a change in assignment,
and that she was just moving to another position in the university.
Hafen did nothing to help Hawkins secure another position.
**In the summer of 1993 Provost Bruce Hafen tried to keep
faithful Mormon woman and historian Claudia Bushman from speaking
in a week-long faculty seminar sponsored by the Dean of Honors
and General Education, although her husband Professor Richard
Bushman was approved to speak. When Hafen learned that the
Bushmans had both already been invited to participate, he
required that Honors Dean Harold Miller only advertise Richard
Bushman.
**In 1993 the university terminated Professor Cecilia Konchar
Farr after her third-year review. Konchar Farr is a feminist
activist who worked to educate people about violence against
women, who helped establish the feminist activist student
club Voice on campus, and who took a public pro-Choice position,
although she also said in her speech that she did not favor
abortion and fully supported the LDS First Presidency's position
on abortion. She also had the full support of her local ecclesiastical
leaders as a faithful Mormon, worthy to participate in all
Church ordinances. At first the university tried to represent
Konchar Farr as an inadequate scholar and teacher, but after
the appeal hearing, an agreement was reached by which both
sides were to say only that there were "irreconcilable differences"
between the administration and Konchar Farr. Again, a woman
professor's career was damaged, and the university gave no
satisfactory reason for that action. (The accreditation committee
might benefit from examining some of the files from the appeal
of that decision; these files are in the possession of Professor
William A. Wilson, Konchar Farr's advocate in the review proceedings
and the chair of the English Department when she was hired.)
**In 1994 candidate Marian Bishop Mumford was selected by
the English Department, with the full approval of the department
chair and the dean of the College of Humanities, for hire
to the faculty of the BYU English Department. Her Ph.D. dissertation
was an examination of women's journals, including the journal
of Anne Frank, to demonstrate that women construct themselves
most authentically in their journals, because they consider
themselves to be the sole audience. A part of that study was
to examine the ways in which Anne Frank wrote about her body
as a way to give herself identity at least in language, in
a culture that literally erased her from existence. Acting
under the instructions of Provost Bruce Hafen, Chair Neal
Lambert told Bishop Mumford that she would be hired only if
she agreed to discontinue her current scholarship. The candidate
declined to come to Brigham Young University under those circumstances.
**In 1994 and 1995 Joni Clarke was selected from a large
pool of applicants as one of the two best candidates for an
American literature faculty position in the English Department.
She had the full support of her local ecclesiastical leaders
and also university academic vice president Alan Wilkins,
who called her and interviewed her for over an hour to determine
her worthiness to teach at BYU. Her research deals with Native
American texts, particularly those by women. Provost Bruce
Hafen did not approve her to be considered for hire.
**In 1995 Dorice Elliot was also selected from a large pool
of applicants as one of the two best candidates for a British
literature faculty position in the English Department. Her
research deals with 19th century British literature by women.
She is greatly admired by her ecclesiastical leaders because
of her work as the Relief Society president in her congregation.
Provost Bruce Hafen did not approve her to be considered for
hire. In both of the above-mentioned cases, the faithfulness
of these women to the Mormon Church was not in question. Why,
then, were they excluded from candidacy for hire at Brigham
Young University? The administration does not give reasons
for its actions, but we may perhaps look at this as part of
the pattern of exclusion or silencing of those who want to
study women's experience from women's perspective.
**In 1995 Professors Karen E. Gerdes and Martha N. Beck were
forbidden from publishing the results of their study of the
experiences of Mormon women survivors of childhood sexual
abuse who asked for help from their Mormon ecclesiastical
leaders. In the majority of cases, the advice these victims
received was damaging rather than helpful. Both professors
have since left the university; the study appeared in the
Spring 1996 issue of Affilia, Journal of Women and Social
Work (Vol. 11, No. 1).
**In April 1996 Katherine Kennedy was chosen for an English
Department faculty appointment in Romanticism, the unanimous
choice of the later British literature section and with almost
unanimous support from the department. Kennedy was supported
for hire by the dean and even the general authority who interviewed
her, as well as by her local ecclesiastical leaders. But the
administration rejected her. Kennedy's research examines images
of motherhood, including breastfeeding, in British Romantic
poetry by women. Regarding the decision not to hire Kennedy,
University Academic Vice President Alan Wilkins explained
to the Department Advisory Council that the English Department
could assume there was something about Kennedy's feminism
that the administration did not approve of.
**There is only one university lecture named after a woman,
the Alice Louise Reynolds lecture. Money was raised to endow
this lecture by Helen Stark, a strong feminist and well-known
member of the Mormon community. She herself contributed approximately
$15,000 to the endowment fund. Stark died two years ago at
the age of 89. In 1995 the committee selected Elouise Bell,
a prominent woman full professor to deliver that lecture.
The administration not only rejected the woman as the speaker;
it informed the committee that Roger R. Keller, a male associate
professor from the Department of Religion, would be the speaker.
In 1996 the Alice Louise Reynolds lecture was not held.
**For several years women candidates for faculty employment
at Brigham Young University have been asked this question
by the academic vice president: "If a general authority [general
leader of the Mormon Church] asked you not to publish your
research, what would you do?" It has been suggested to the
candidates that they must agree not to publish in such a case.
This condition of employment undermines the position of new
women faculty members at Brigham Young University. To be hired,
they apparently must agree to let male ecclesiastical leaders
who are not trained in their disciplines have final authority
over the publication of their scholarship. They are offered
no review process to determine the fairness or accuracy of
the authority's request. Again, women are instructed that
they must suppress their own perspectives on their own experience
or research if a male authority so directs them.
**In its entire seventy-five year history, a woman faculty
member has never been chosen to present BYU's distinguished
faculty lecture.
The BYU AAUP Chapter will provide documentation of all of
the above claims upon request. We will obtain statements from
or provide the Accreditation Committee with the addresses
and telephone numbers of the individuals named in this document.
|
8. Issues Dealing with the new BYU Ecclesiastical
Endorsement Policy |
Correspondence Between William E. Evenson And President
Merrill J. Bateman, Winter 1996.
In order that those who have asked might see the full correspondence
between William E. Evenson and President Merrill J. Bateman
relating to academic freedom at BYU and the BYU policy of annual
monitoring of employees for temple worthiness as a condition
of employment, four documents follow. These are
- William E. Evenson, Guest Opinion, The Daily Herald, Provo,
UT, February 14, 1996.
- William E. Evenson to President Merrill J. Bateman, memo
of thanks (March 8, 1996) and detailed summary of their
meeting held March 5, 1996.
- President Merrill J. Bateman to William E. Evenson, letter
of April 1, 1996.
- William E. Evenson to President Merrill J. Bateman, memo
of response to April 1 letter, April 23, 1996.
|
The Daily Herald, Provo, Utah, February 14, 1996: Guest
Opinion
New BYU policy undermines trust
By William E. Evenson
I believe the recent decision to send an annual list of
BYU employees to their stake presidents and bishops in order
to verify their current eligibility for a temple recommend
is a most ill-advised policy.
I do agree that it is important that BYU employees be faithful,
committed members of the LDS church or supportive persons
of other faiths, yet I am still troubled and offended by this
latest policy.
For me, the most troublesome aspect of this approach to
maintaining a faithful faculty and staff at BYU is the extent
to which it intrudes into one's personal religious life. My
faith is personal and largely private. I share it with my
family and with church leaders and occasionally with very
close friends. I share it as I choose and as I feel moved
to do.
Something essential is taken away from this personal faith
when my relationship with my religious leaders becomes a matter
of maintaining my employment. This intrusion of employment
concerns into that relationship seems controlling and inappropriate.
As such, it is manipulative, counter-productive, and outside
the Gospel. Driving persons to outward obedience severely
compromises the development of genuine inner spirituality.
Second, a regular and formal request made to ecclesiastical
leaders, through ecclesiastical channels, to review the conduct
of all BYU employees is threatening and conveys a serious
lack of trust, no matter what verbal assurances are given.
And what is gained in exchange for the lost trust? Nothing.
Local Church leaders have already been asked to alert BYU
officials, through proper channels, if serious problems exist.
Why, then, impose a new procedure that destroys the sense
of trust LDS church leaders and BYU officials should convey
to the thousands of faithful BYU employees -- a procedure
justified on an unproven premise that a tiny fraction may
not be faithful?
Nearly all of our LDS BYU employees are faithful and loyal,
and those who are not LDS are almost uniformly willing to
live according to LDS Church principles. Policies should be
constructed to provide encouragement and opportunity, not
to put all the faithful employees through a sieve designed
only for an uncommitted few. Henry Stimson said, "The only
way to make a man trustworthy is to trust him." There are
better ways than this policy to solve any problem that may
exist.
I believe it is wrong to set up a system of monitoring.
Many crucial expectations are not monitored, with no serious
harm to the university or the church. For example, who is
sent a list of employees in order to certify avoidance of
sexual harassment or gross abuse of trust in a faculty-student
relationship, both of which are grounds for dismissal? Whenever
problems in these or numerous other areas come to the attention
of university officials, they are dealt with; everyone expects
that. But monitoring undermines trust, encourages dishonesty
and finally doesn't make anything better anyway. People resent
such policies and resist them and subvert them.
I am convinced that most bishops and stake presidents are
and will be supportive and even protective of their members
who are BYU employees. Nonetheless, when the university effectively
puts employment decisions in the hands of these church leaders
via the determination of "eligibility" for a temple recommend,
university employees are ultimately subject to a very wide
range of judgments about attitudes and personal views. And
consistency in these judgments will be unattainable.
"Eligibility" for a temple recommend goes well beyond what
has actually been a condition of employment at BYU previously:
"Conduct" consistent with temple privileges. It is appropriate
to hold employees accountable for their conduct, but their
private views are much more personal and less relevant for
university employment, while being much more subject to arbitrary
judgment and interpretation that can vary from one LDS leader
to another.
This move from "conduct" to "eligibility" is significant
to many of us, and we are offended that it was undertaken
without discussion in the campus community. And even if one
were to grant, which I do not, that the change in policy is
small, that would not make the policy right.
When the academic freedom policy was discussed at BYU prior
to its adoption in 1993, university administrators were explicitly
asked whether stake presidents would be given a list of BYU
employees in their stakes in order to monitor their behavior.
Assurances were repeatedly given, some of them to me personally
and one in a public meeting in the de Jong Concert Hall, that
university officials would never ask ecclesiastical leaders
to report on their ward and stake members (although LDS leaders
were free to initiate such contact when they deemed it necessary)
and that strict boundaries would be upheld between spiritual
matters and university business. Unfortunately, the present
policy goes against those promises.
Finally, I must address a question I have been asked as
I have spoken out against this policy: Why don't those who
are unhappy with the policy simply leave BYU? This would diminish
BYU immeasurably.
I and many of my colleagues who are disturbed by this policy
have given many years of our careers to help BYU become a
first- class university of faith, something very difficult
to accomplish but surely worth aspiring to.
We have too much invested to simply want to turn our backs
on BYU because university officials have not seen clearly
the futility and impropriety of what is, no doubt, a well-intentioned
policy.
I hope we can join together to make a better policy and
a better university.
(William E. Evenson is a professor of physics at Brigham
Young University. He is a former associate academic vice president,
former Dean of Physical and Mathematical Sciences and former
Dean of General Education.)
|
William E. Evenson
President Merrill J. Bateman
March 8, 1996 211 KMB8-6078 D-346 ASB Re: Thanks for the
discussion
Thank you for inviting me to your office on Tuesday to discuss
the concerns I have expressed about the policy of having an
annual check-off of temple-worthy conduct for BYU employees.
I appreciated the discussion, especially your candor and openness.
I also appreciated your affirmation of the legitimacy of my
public expressions of concern about a public policy of the
University.
Because I feel strongly about the issues we discussed, I
made fairly detailed notes of our discussion for my own reference
shortly after our meeting. I enclose a copy of those notes
for your information. I do not intend to make them available
to others beyond family and one or two close confidants. If
you see anything in these notes of our meeting that you think
does not faithfully reflect our exchange or even the intent
of something one or the other of us may have said, I would
be grateful for a clarification.
There are three large related issues that I would like to
explore further in separate memos to you and your colleagues
in the university administration, if that would not be imposing
too much. These issues are
- what I think will be required to build a great university
that properly serves the students, both in their intellectual
development and in providing academic credibility for their
degrees, and maintains an appropriately close and supportive
relationship with the Church,
- how I see accountability and renewal of commitment operating
in the university setting, and
- how the present retirement program is limiting the voluntary
departure of some employees who do not belong at BYU.
Thank you again for meeting with me and for your commitment
to lift the University. |
March 5, 1996 Recollections of Meeting with BYU President
Merrill J. Bateman Meeting held March 5, 1996 by William E.
Evenson
Present: President Bateman and William E. Evenson
This meeting was held at the invitation of President Bateman
in response to my public comments about the policy to have
local Church leaders report annually on BYU employees' adherence
to LDS standards.
President Bateman was very cordial and congenial throughout
the meeting. At the outset of the meeting, he took time to
get acquainted, asking me about my background and experience
at BYU. He said that he had been reading about me quite a
lot and felt it would be useful to get acquainted face to
face.
President Bateman made clear that his purpose in the meeting
was to reassure me that the policy will be implemented fairly
and cautiously. He said that Jim Gordon, Associate Academic
Vice President - Faculty Personnel, will be the University's
represen tative in these matters and deal directly with BYU
faculty who are not listed as worthy by their bishops. [Who
handles non- faculty employees? Are there two contact points
at the Univer sity?]
President Bateman also tried to assure me that he understands
my concerns but is convinced that the abuses I fear will not
be realized because of the care they are taking in implementation.
He assured me that the standard remains a conduct standard,
not a belief standard, and that he understands the difficulties
that would be associated with judging shades of belief. I
thanked him for the clarification that appeared in the Y News.
I asked why he thinks they need to do this at all, i.e.
what problem do they think they are solving with this procedure.
He responded that the previous policy, whereby Church leaders
were asked to take the initiative to alert the University
when they were aware of a problem, was implemented unevenly
and hence unfairly. The present approach is more likely to
treat everyone the same.
I noted that I am not in favor of any policy that has bishops
or stake presidents report on their members' eligibility for
employ ment. I pointed out that before such a policy was in
existence I participated as a university administrator in
resolving problems with faculty members who were not living
in accordance with Church standards. We were made aware of
several cases, and we worked with them directly. Such cases
are difficult and time- consuming and demand a great deal
of energy to handle correctly. They must each be handled in
a way that protects both the faculty member and the University.
I offered the opinion that such cases were handled more effectively
during the Holland administration without a monitoring policy
than during the most recent univer sity administration, where
I have sensed that they hoped the problems would be solved
by rules rather than by dealing directly with them.
I said that I find it hard to imagine that University leaders
would remain unaware for long of faculty members who are actively
undermining faith. So why make a rule that imposes on all
employees in order to solve a very few real problems? This
creates a feeling of lack of trust as well as interfering
with the private relationships between employees and their
Church leaders.
President Bateman acknowledged that we had handled some
difficult problems during the Holland administration without
the current policy, and perhaps more effectively than the
current policy would allow. However, he pointed out that there
are some cases that have persisted. He agreed that university
administrators do become aware of problems, but this policy
gives them a better tool to handle the problems. I agreed
that we were not able to handle all the problems effectively
that came up during the Holland administration, but that is
always true: these problems are difficult and time-consuming;
one has no choice but to prioritize and work on the most serious
ones. President Bateman agreed with that and said, "We will
have to do that, too."
I pointed out that these problems will always be with us.
People come to the University idealistic and committed, but
some will change their views over the years. Others create
problems in their lives that make it no longer appropriate
for them to stay here. So care in hiring alone will never
prevent personnel problems related to these conduct standards.
But the rules will not uncover or resolve such problems by
themselves. University administrators will always have to
work through long and diffi cult personnel issues. President
Bateman agreed that we will always have problems of this type
to work through; the policy will not make them go away, but
he hopes the policy will help University administrators identify
and deal with the problems.
President Bateman also agreed that there is a problem at
the University with trust: employees do not feel trusted.
He said he intends to work on establishing a level of trust,
acknowledg ing that it will take a long time to develop the
level of trust that should be here.
As I outlined my experience with personnel problems at the
University and the more open approach that experience has
led me to favor, I noted that I had made many of the points
of my newspaper piece privately to University administrators
three years ago, when I was dean of Physical and Mathematical
Sciences. I received only an acknowledgement and thanks for
those comments at that time, never a substantive reply. Now
the issue has become a public one, with the promulgation of
the recent policy. President Bateman immediately said that
he had no problem with my expressing my concerns publicly;
I have every right to say what I think about a public policy
of the University.
President Bateman also said that yesterday in Deans' Council
a couple of the deans reported that they had already been
visited by employees who are not in compliance with the expectation
of worthy conduct. These employees came to say that they were
not in compliance, they had not been in compliance for years,
they would not be in compliance, and what was the University
going to do about it? President Bateman offered this as evidence
that the new policy is already working, bringing people with
problems out into the open. I pointed out that the University
has always been able to deal with open defiance of the standards.
[And what is the likelihood that these cases were previously
unknown to the deans?]
I argued that, while it is appropriate to expect employees
to be faithful, this policy of looking over everyone's shoulder
biases people toward safe work, even in cases where the work
does not have direct or obvious religious implications. Any
path-breaking work leads people to see the world anew. This
is threatening in itself to many people. A bias toward safe
work necessarily interferes with our progress as a university,
limiting our ability to challenge students to their fullest
potential and to stimulate their greatest intellectual development,
as well as restricting our contributions to the expansion
of knowledge.
President Bateman did not agree that the policy could have
a negative effect on the work of faculty members where that
work is clearly separate from Church issues. He shares my
assessment of the importance of pioneering work at BYU and
of the necessity for reaching beyond "safe" work in the disciplines.
He is confident that we will be able to do such work here.
He expressed grati tude for the opportunity he has had to
study at a university where the faculty were intellectually
alive and to see a profes sor have insights in the classroom
that changed the course they were teaching and led to important
contributions in the disci pline. He expressed confidence
that we can provide those experi ences for our students at
BYU.
I then suggested that the University must always be supportive
of the Church, but it must also be separate from the Church.
There are many things that must take place in the classrooms,
lecture halls, and theaters of the University for the benefit
of the students' intellectual development that would not be
appropriate in a Church setting. Yet some of these activities
now stimulate complaints from the surrounding Church community
because they do not understand these differences. I believe
the line between University and Church has blurred too much
and that this blurring now interferes with carrying out the
mission of the University. I agree that the Church needs to
define and defend its central doctrines, and the University
needs to respect and assist that support of doctrine. But
those central doctrines should consti tute a restricted set
of issues, and it should be clearer than it is now that beyond
those limits great freedom of thought and expression are appropriate.
President Bateman reaffirmed that BYU should be viewed as
an arm of the Church. He does not share my view of the importance
of maintaining a distinction between these institutions, even
though he agrees that their missions differ. Rather, he thinks
it is more important to emphasize their relatedness, even
at the risk of blurring the distinctions, than to dwell on
the separate mission of the University.
The meeting ended on just as cordial a note as it began.
|
[Brigham Young University President's letterhead] April 1,
1996
Professor William E. Evenson 211 KMB CAMPUS
Dear Bill:
I appreciated the opportunity of meeting with you a short
time ago and read with interest the letter you sent to me
after ward. There is one statement in your letter which is
not accu rate. You thanked me for approving your statements
to the press regarding the temple eligibility policy. If I
remember cor rectly, my statement was that "you did not offend
me personally by writing to the press."
You should understand, however, that your actions are not
consistent with the spirit of this university. In that regard,
the first point to be made is that the policy you are criticizing
is not a policy initiated by the University but one initiated
by the Board of Trustees for the entire Church Educational
System. Since the Board of Trustees consists of the First
Presidency and other general authorities, the temple eligibility
policy and the review procedures have come from them.
For your benefit, I am enclosing an excerpt from a statement
made by President George Q. Cannon of the First Presidency
on this matter. I think you will find it of great interest.
I hope you understand that although your actions did not offend
me personally, they were not actions of which I approve.
Again, I hope that you will understand my sincere desire
to help you and that all of our desires are to make BYU a
better university.
Sincerely,
(signed Merrill)
Merrill J. Bateman
MJB:jne, enclosure
Attachments:
Photocopies of title page and pages 276-7 and 272-3 from
Gospel Truth: Discourses and Writings of President George
Q. Cannon, First Counselor to Presidents John Taylor, Wilford
Woodruff, and Lorenzo Snow, Volume 2, 1974. (Selected, arranged,
and edited by Jerreld L. Newquist, published by Deseret Book
Company, Salt Lake City, Utah)
The three photocopied pages included in the top margin facsimile
traces from "LDS HISTORICAL DEPT." on Friday, March 29, 1996,
11:34 am and from "CHURCH ADMIN BLDG 3RD FL" on Friday, March
29, 1996, 12:09 pm.
Highlighted in yellow along the left margin was the following
paragraph from pp. 276-7 (ellipses in original):
OPPOSITION TO AUTHORITIES CAUSES APOSTASY. A friend . .
. wished to know whether we . . . considered an honest difference
of opinion between a member of the Church and the Authorities
of the Church was apostasy. . . . We replied that we had not
stated that an honest difference of opinion between a member
of the Church and the Authorities constituted apostasy, for
we could conceive of a man honestly differing in opinion from
the Authorities of the Church and yet not be an apos tate;
but we could not conceive of a man publishing these differences
of opinion and seeking by arguments, sophistry and special
pleading to enforce them upon the people to produce division
and strife and to place the acts and counsels of the Authorities
of the Church, if possible, in a wrong light, and not be an
apostate, for such conduct was apostasy as we understood the
term.
We further said that while a man might honestly differ in
opinion from the Authorities through a want of understanding,
he had to be exceedingly careful how he acted in relation
to such differences, or the adver sary would take advantage
of him, and he would soon become imbued with the spirit of
apostasy and be found fighting against God and the authority
which He had placed here to govern His Church. (DEN, November
3, 1869)
Pp. 272-3 contained the following marked passage (ellipses
in original):
A SYMPTOM OF APOSTASY. It is not for everyone to judge and
condemn God's servants. It is against such a feeling that
the warning is given, "Touch not mine anointed and do my prophets
no harm." [1 Chronicles 16:22.]
We have been taught from the beginning that one of the most
dangerous symptoms of apostasy from the Church is speaking
evil of the Lord's servants; whenever a spirit of this kind
takes possession of one who is called a Latter-day Saint,
it is sure to grieve the Spirit of God; it invites darkness
to enter the mind, and, unless it is sincerely repented of,
it causes apostasy to follow. For this reason, if for no other,
our children should be taught from the time they are old enough
to comprehend that they are treading upon slippery ground
whenever they venture to criticise, censure or condemn those
whom the Lord has chosen to be His servants.
Many think it is part of their privilege in the exercise
of free speech to do this and this it is a sign of independence.
But there is none of the true liberty of free speech in it;
it becomes license and is offensive to the Lord. . . . Respect
for authority should be constantly taught. . . . The Saints
honor God; they honor the authority which He bestows; and
in honoring that authority they honor those who bear it. This
is the spirit of true independence, and it does not take away
the least particle from the true dignity of manhood and womanhood.
The Lord says: ". . . them that honour me I will honour, and
they hat despise me shall be lightly esteemed." [1 Samuel
2:30.] (November 1, 1894, JI 29:668)
|
William E. Evenson
President Merrill J. Bateman
April 23, 1996 211 KMB8-6078 D-346 ASB
Re: Public discussion of university policies
I have pondered long over your letter of earlier this month
which included statements from President George Q. Cannon.
I have no desire to be out of harmony with the Church. Indeed,
I have tried to comport myself both privately and in public
accord ing to the principles of the gospel, including the
following counsel which the First Presidency gave in an official
message to the Church in 1910:
Free will, free thought, free speech, free action to the
line of the liberty of others form an essential part of our
faith and practise.
It is hard for me to understand that actions which I believe
to be in harmony with this instruction from the First Presidency
could be "not consistent with the spirit of this university."
I hope there is a fundamental misunderstanding at the basis
of your letter to me. The excerpts from President George Q.
Cannon on pp. 272-3, given while he was in the First Presidency,
refer to judging or condemning "God's servants." I have expressed
strong disagreement with a university policy, but I have not
intended to show, nor do I believe I have shown, disrespect
or judgment or condemnation of the General Authorities who
guide this university. I have tried to be very careful to
keep the discussion on the level of policy. I understand from
the First Presidency statement quoted above that this level
of discussion is not only to be permitted, but is "an essential
part of our faith and practise."
The other excerpt from President Cannon, on pp. 276-7, that
was highlighted in the copy you sent me, is much more clearly
rele vant to my recent actions. Unfortunately, it is difficult
to see how this statement, given while Elder Cannon was a
member of the Quorum of the Twelve, squares with the First
Presidency instruc tion quoted above. And it is also difficult
for me to see how this statement can be reconciled with the
following, later statement by President Cannon when he was
first counselor in the First Presidency:
There must be the greatest possible liberty of thought,
of expression and of action in our midst -- that is the greatest
possible consistent with good order, and the preservation
of the rights of others. Liberty cannot be permitted to degenerate
into license, but the utmost liberty can be enjoyed so long
as it does not overstep that boundary. It becomes, therefore,
a natural duty devolving upon us, with our views concerning
these eternal principles that have come down from God, that
were taught by God in the early ages unto man, that have been
re-enforced from time to time by Him through the silent, unseen
agency of His power in various ages -- I say it becomes our
natural duty to see that these principles are carried out
and maintained in the earth. We become their natural champions.
Besides advocating and maintaining them, it becomes our province
to strug gle for their supremacy. (JD 24:58-9, March 18, 1883)
In my study of Church teachings regarding the propriety
of free expression about matters of policy, I find many additional
statements endorsing free expression, like those quoted above.
For example, President Joseph F. Smith as President of the
Church, testifying under oath to the U. S. Senate in 1904:
The members of the Mormon Church are among the freest and
most independent people of all the Christian denom inations.
They are not all united on every principle. Every man is entitled
to his own opinion and his own views and his own conceptions
of right and wrong so long as they do not come in conflict
with the standard principles of the church. (Smoot hearings,
p. 98)
President Hugh B. Brown as first counselor in the First
Presi dency made another such statement at BYU in 1969:
Preserve, then, the freedom of your mind in education and
in religion, and be unafraid to express your thoughts and
to insist upon your right to examine every proposition. We
are not so much concerned with whether your thoughts are orthodox
or heterodox as we are that you shall have thoughts.
I repeat that I do not desire to be out of harmony with
the Church. I have labored under the conviction that my actions
have been in the spirit of the teachings of the First Presidency,
as reflected in the sampling given above. Thank you for your
clarification of our conversation. I see BYU as an institution
that is necessarily separate from and fully supportive of
the Church. I will continue to try to help Brigham Young University
become the best it can be.
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9. Issues of Academic Freedom at BYU |
The following document was prepared by members of the BYU
AAUP for submission to the Northwest Accreditation Association
during the spring of 1996. This document was designed to represent
the point of view of the BYU AAUP regarding issues of academic
freedom at BYU during the past few years. We wanted to have
the accreditors hear an alternative point of view during their
period of examination of BYU for reaccreditation.
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5 March 1996
BYU Chapter Of The American Association Of University Professors
Report On Issues Of Academic Freedom At BYU
While the details are numerous and complicated, our argument
is simple. BYU has, in recent years, not adhered to the following
principles stated in the Accreditation Handbook (1994 Edition)
of the Northwest Association of Schools and Colleges:
- p. 7, item 3: "An institution owned by or related to an
outside agency, such as a church . . . should ensure that
it maintains an atmosphere in which intellectual freedom
and independence exist."
- p. 8, item 13 and p. 133, item 2: which require that "reasonable
limitations on freedom of inquiry or expression which are
dictated by institutional purpose" be "published candidly."
- p. 67, top: "Faculty security should also be implemented
through faculty tenure provisions and safeguards for academic
freedom."
- p. 126, Institutional Integrity: "A college or university
is an institution of higher learning. Those within it have
as a first concern evidence and truth rather than particular
judgments of institutional benefactors, concerns of churchmen,
public opinion, social pressure, or political proscription.
"Relating to this general concern corresponding to intellectual
and academic freedom are correlative responsibilities. On
the part of trustees and administrators there is the obligation
to protect faculty and students from inappropriate pressures
or destructive harassments."
The following brief examples indicate that for approximately
the last six years BYU has become increasingly less open to
differences of opinion and more inclined to control faculty
and student expression and behavior.
Over the course of five years these progressive changes
have appeared, with no previous discussion, in faculty contracts:
-- 1992 contracts, for the first time, included language to
the effect that "Faculty who are members of BYU's sponsoring
Church also accept the spiritual and temporal expectations
of wholehearted Church membership."
-- 1993 contracts changed this phrase to the more specific
"LDS faculty also accept as a condition of employment the
standards of conduct consistent with qualifying for temple
privileges."
-- And in 1996 it was announced that employees' ecclesiastical
leaders would be required to report yearly on whether employees
were in fact "temple worthy."
MacArthur Fellow, Pulitzer Prize Winner, Harvard Professor
of History, and Mormon Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, with no explanation
and no chance for discussion, was declared unfit to give the
keynote address at the 1993 BYU Women's Conference and has
not been allowed to speak on campus since. Other speakers
have been similarly disqualified without comment or discussion.
Candidates for faculty positions (all of whom must be approved
by the administration before being invited to campus) are
routinely turned down without explanation and with no chance
for departments to argue their cases. This has been especially
egregious recently in the English Department.
The administration has repeatedly responded to allegations
made in anonymous letters about faculty members by alerting
deans and department chairs and requiring faculty to respond
to the charges, although there is no chance to face the accuser
and no due process. Accusations that have caused faculty trouble
(from contracts not being renewed to general intimidation
to time lost answering the charges) include complaints about
books being used in courses, plays performed, art exhibited,
references to evolution, mention of population issues, politicizing
the classroom (feminism, postmodernism, and environmentalism
are three of the favorites), and a range of theological issues.
We have chosen to document extensively three of the most
troubling cases in which young faculty members have been forced
to leave BYU, cases that received much press coverage, that
evoked protests on campus, and in the aftermath of which other
faculty left the university as well (most prominently Hal
Miller, then Dean of Honors and General Education, Tomi-Ann
Roberts, assistant professor of Psychology, William Davis,
assistant professor of German, Martha Bradley, assistant professor
of History, and Martha Nibley Beck, assistant professor of
Sociology).
In two of the cases (David Knowlton, Cecilia Konchar-Farr)
University administrators acted improperly to terminate the
employment of the faculty member. Rather than forthrightly
stating that BYU faculty may not take a personal pro-choice
position in abortion
debates (Konchar-Farr) or that discussion of the Church
missionary system in the independent Mormon forum of Sunstone
is unacceptable (Knowlton), the administration argued that
because of inadequate scholarship the two professors should
not be advanced to candidacy for tenure. The following documents,
including the reports of an ad-hoc academic freedom committee,
letters by department chairs and others about the review process
and specific cases, and the professors' own statements, substantiate
the claim that contrary to official statements, the two professors
were at least as academically productive as others who passed
the same review, and that the standard third-year review process
was suddenly and drastically changed for specific political
ends.
The third case (Brian Evenson) did not play itself out because
Evenson left the university to take another job, but it too
was a case in which the administration moved to undermine
a fair review process.
Although the administration worked to make it appear that
standard procedures of faculty governance were followed in
each case, there are indications (Rex Lee's statements after
the appeals, English-Department-Chair Jay Fox's memo) that
decisions were made at the behest of a member or members of
the BYU Board of Trustees (in Evenson's case as the result
of an anonymous letter denouncing him to the Board), but in
no case was the faculty member given a chance to speak with
members of the Board, and there was no evidence that the administration,
rather than simply carrying out orders, argued the respective
faculty member's case with the Board of Trustees or seriously
took into account the points made during the appeals process.
The outcomes were foregone conclusions
In saying this about members of the administration and our
Board of Trustees, in presenting this documentation at all,
we run the risk of being dismissed from the university (without
appeal to anyone other than the prosecutors of the case --
see below) on the charge that our behavior or expression seriously
and adversely affects the University mission or the Church.
Examples would include expression with students or in public
that: 1. Contradicts or opposes, rather than analyzes or discusses,
fundamental Church doctrine or policy; 2. Deliberately attacks
or derides the Church or its general leaders. . . . The ultimate
responsibility to determine harm to the University mission
or the church, however, remains vested in the University's
governing bodies -- including the University president and
central administration and, finally, the board of Trustees.
(Statement on Academic Freedom at Brigham Young University)
The three cases we document here are examples of actions
by our administration that have contributed to a climate of
distrust and fear on campus. It is virtually impossible to
criticize decisions of those who run the University without
being branded "advocates of the adversary" (Pres. Bateman,
Daily Universe Interview) and thus being defined as those
whose actions seriously and adversely affect the University's
mission.
We see our role in quite different terms, as the kind of
open and productive criticism and argumentation that foster
good thinking and moral decision making. We founded the BYU
Chapter of the AAUP last year hoping to contribute constructively
to a University to which we are devoted and to which we have
given our best efforts over many years. We present the following
information in that spirit.
Members of the BYU Chapter of the American Association of
University Professors
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2000-11-12 |
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