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The freedom of academics to pursue knowledge and truth in their
research, writing, and teaching is a fundamental principle of
contemporary higher education in the United States. But this
freedom has been hard won and regularly abridged, reinterpreted,
and violated. Academic freedom has been central to many issues and
controversies in higher education and has thus generated literature
in a variety of disciplines. This book provides access to that
literature. Included are entries for nearly 500 books, chapters,
articles, reports, web sites, and other sources of information
about academic freedom. Each entry includes a descriptive
annotation, and the entries are grouped in topical chapters. While
most of the works cited were published since the 1940 American
Association of University Professors Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure, some older studies have also been
included. Though the volume focuses primarily on higher education
in the U.S., it also includes a chapter on academic freedom in
other countries.
The Academic Bill of Rights was introduced in 2003 after two
decades of conservative critiques of higher education and its
faculty. Its goal was to generate legislative initiatives to rein
in the "tenured radicals" who were allegedly dominating higher
education and infringing on the academic freedom rights of
conservative students. At its root, the debate revolves around some
core questions: who should teach, and who has the knowledge and
training to hire and evaluate faculty; what knowledge should be
taught; and, most fundamentally, who should make these decisions?
Should it be trained faculty, who are specialists in their fields
and who were hired to teach and advance knowledge? Or should it be
politicians or outsiders, who may be empowered by legislation to
interfere in academic decisions? The academic freedom of faculty,
and the independence of higher education, depends on the answers to
these questions. This book is the first to bring together a variety
of critiques of the Academic Bill of Rights. Furthermore, by
including some works by David Horowitz and his critics, as well as
websites and a bibliography reflecting various points of view, it
gives life to the debate, showing some of the give and take of the
arguments. This collection also presents the background on the
historical context of academic freedom, showing its fragility and
therefore the importance of preserving it. Also featured are some
core documents (such as the AAUP's 1940 Statement of Principles on
Academic Freedom and Tenure) that are central to the debates. Some
of the conservative critiques of higher education are identified in
the selective annotated bibliography chapter. And, case studies of
how the ABOR wascontested in three states where it was introduced
as legislation are also included. Finally, this book attempts to
refocus concerns about higher education on the real issue: its
growing domination by corporate values and interests, converting
higher education from a public good into an increasingly private
commodity.
Over the past twenty years, one of the most bitter debates within
the social sciences has centered on Arthur Jensen's contention that
American blacks are, on average, less intelligent than whites and
that this alleged difference is genetic in origin. Aby's selective,
annotated bibliography offers scholars a concise guide to the storm
of argument and counterargument over Jensen's suggestion and to the
scientific, legal, educational, philosophic, and social issues it
has raised. Aby has catalogued and described more than 400 books,
book chapters, professional journal articles, newspaper and
magazine articles, source documents, media materials, and reference
sources relating to the controversy. He begins with an overview of
the IQ debate, its history, and the principal participants. He then
arranges bibliographic entries in chapters according to the type of
source; each entry includes descriptive annotations of up to 300
words. A glossary explains technical terms that are used in the
annotations and in the debate itself. This bibliography will be an
important addition to collections in education, sociology, and
psychology, as well as a resource for courses on educational
testing and measurement, racism, sociology of education, and black
education.
A valuable research resource for students, faculty, librarians, and
scholars Now in its third edition, this critically acclaimed work
provides undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, and
librarians with descriptions of approximately 610 major reference
sources in sociology, its subdisciplines, and the related social
sciences. Emphasis in this edition is on works in English published
in the United States, Great Britain, Canada, and Australia from
1997 to early 2004. Earlier works are included if coverage is
historically important or not historically bound. The third edition
has been reorganized for ease of searching, and adds over 325 new
titles and electronic sources, as well surveying new editions and
updates of previously cited works, making this a substantial
revision and complement to the previous edition. Serves as both a
valuable research resource for students, faculty, librarians, and
scholars, and a collection development tool
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