Harvard President Claudine Gay resigns after plagiarism and campus antisemitism accusations
![Harvard President Claudine Gay resigns after plagiarism and campus antisemitism accusations Harvard President Claudine Gay resigns after plagiarism and campus antisemitism accusations](https://citizentv.obs.af-south-1.myhuaweicloud.com/115657/conversions/Gay-og_image.webp)
Harvard University President Claudine Gay announced her resignation after weeks of scrutiny over her university's handling of antisemitism on campus and allegations of plagiarism in her academic work.
Harvard
President Claudine Gay announced Tuesday she is stepping down just six months into
her presidency amid a
firestorm of controversy at the university.
“It is with a heavy heart but a deep love for Harvard that I write
to share that I will be stepping down as president,” Gay wrote in a letter to the Harvard community. “After
consultation with members of the Corporation, it has become clear that it is in
the best interests of Harvard for me to resign so that our community can
navigate this moment of extraordinary challenge with a focus on the institution
rather than any individual.”
Gay did not say when she plans to formally step down but she described
the decision as “difficult beyond words.”
Gay’s resignation comes amid a period of extreme turmoil at one of
America’s most prestigious universities and marks the end of the presidency of
the first Black president and second woman in Harvard’s nearly 400-year
history. The controversy swirling around Harvard drew in CEOs, billionaires,
powerful donors and even leaders of Congress.
Gay made the decision to step down as Harvard’s president late
last week, a person close to Gay told CNN.
That timing indicates Gay was already planning to resign before
new plagiarism allegations emerged that were first reported by the Washington Free Beacon on Monday.
Gay acknowledged the short length of her tenure, writing: “When my
brief presidency is remembered, I hope it will be seen as a moment of
reawakening to the importance of striving to find our common humanity — and of
not allowing rancor and vituperation to undermine the vital process of
education,” Gay said.
She
also noted that “it has been distressing to have doubt cast on my commitments
to confronting hate and to upholding scholarly rigor — two bedrock values that
are fundamental to who I am — and frightening to be subjected to personal
attacks and threats fueled by racial animus.”
In a letter Tuesday, the Harvard Corporation defended Gay and said
they accepted her resignation “with sorrow.” The Corporation, which is the
university’s governing body, said she showed “remarkable resilience in the face
of deeply personal and sustained attacks.”
“While some of this has played out in the public domain, much of
it has taken the form of repugnant and in some cases racist vitriol directed at
her through disgraceful emails and phone calls. We condemn such attacks in the
strongest possible terms,” the letter read.
Gay
was undone in part by an ongoing plagiarism scandal and a disastrous congressional
hearing last month in which she and other university presidents
failed to explicitly say calls for genocide of Jewish people constituted
bullying and harassment on campus.
Tensions have surged on
some college campuses following the October 7 terror attacks by Hamas against
Israel. There have been hundreds of protests and
counterprotests on college campuses, with some of them turning
violent.
The faces and names of some students allegedly linked to
anti-Israel statements were displayed on mobile billboards near the campuses of both Harvard and
Columbia. Another Ivy League school, the University of Pennsylvania, alerted the FBI to violent
antisemitic threats made against some faculty members.
Separately,
Gay had drawn widespread criticism after accusations of plagiarism emerged,
including multiple instances of missing quotation marks and
citations. Harvard recently announced Gay planned to submit corrections to
her 1997 PhD dissertation to correct instances of “inadequate citation,” adding
to the ones she issued earlier to a pair of
scholarly articles she wrote in the 2000s.
Notably, the university called those corrections “regrettable,”
but found they did not meet the punishable threshold of research
misconduct.
CNN spoke with two plagiarism experts about new allegations of
plagiarism against Gay, as first reported by the conservative publication, the Washington Free Beacon.
Both said elements of Gay’s 2001 article, “The Effect of Minority
Districts and Minority Representation on Political Participation in
California,” constituted plagiarism.
Several sentences from scholar David T. Canon’s 1999 book appear
in Gay’s article. But Gay failed to use quotation marks or cite the work
in two passages. His end notes are almost verbatim in her footnotes.
Canon told CNN on Tuesday: “I am not at all concerned about the
passages in the Free
Beacon article concerning my work. Both Dr. Gay and I are defining basic
terms. Good definitions of these terms would have to use similar language or
they would not be accurate. This isn’t even close to an example of academic
plagiarism.”
But experts noted that the feelings of the author are not a factor
when assessing a case of potential plagiarism.
Jonathan Bailey, a plagiarism and copyright consultant who runs
the site Plagiarism Today, told CNN Gay’s resignation
was “likely the best thing she could do for her and the school.”
“The plagiarism scandals have become a tremendous distraction for
both her and the school. While another researcher with a similar pattern of
issues would likely not be forced to resign or face termination, she is both
the president of Harvard and the center of a very politically charged story.
Her situation is unique,” he said.
Michael Dougherty, a professor of philosophy at Ohio
Dominican University who has written two books on plagiarism, told CNN over
email, “The problem here is that readers of Gay’s text cannot, from the text
itself, tell whose voice is speaking in the text,” he said.
He added that academics and students are obligated to write their
own sentences and give credit when words originate with someone else, using
quotation marks, footnotes in the right place, block quotes, and the like.
“The apparent failure to use quotation marks means that David
Canon’s authorship over these words is suppressed, even though Canon is
mentioned elsewhere,” he said.
Alan M. Garber, who currently serves as provost and chief academic
officer at Harvard, will step in as interim president until the school finds a
new leader, the Harvard Corporation announced in a letter on Tuesday.
“We are fortunate to have someone of Alan’s broad and deep
experience, incisive judgment, collaborative style, and extraordinary institutional
knowledge to carry forward key priorities and to guide the university through
this interim period,” the corporation said.
The Corporation said the search for a new president would “begin
in due course,” but did not specify an exact timeline.
Gay said in her letter she would return to a faculty position “and
to the scholarship and teaching that are the lifeblood of what we do.”
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