I pass along the contents of the Spring 2024 issue of Academe, in which the journal reconsiders the role of race in its history. This from the announcement:
Our spring issue takes an overdue step toward reconsidering the role of race in the AAUP’s history. Articles look to the past and draw lessons for the present, examining such topics as W. E. B. Du Bois’s membership in and resignation from the AAUP; the Association's discriminatory membership practices during the segregation era; academic freedom investigations and the Black freedom struggle; the AAUP’s work with HBCUs; the Angela Davis case at the University of California, Los Angeles; and the AAUP’s role in fights over affirmative action.
The issue contents with links follows below.
FEATURES
Toward the Cooperative University: W. E. B. Du Bois's Membership in the AAUP
Reflections on a radical vision for higher education.
By Andrew J. Douglas
Membership of Black Professors and the Annual Meeting
The AAUP during the segregation era.
By Hans-Joerg Tiede
The AAUP and the Black Freedom Struggle, 1955–1965
Academic freedom investigations in the South.
By Joy Ann Williamson-Lott
The AAUP and Academic Freedom at Grambling
Looking back at the AAUP’s work at one historically Black institution.
By Brian M. McGowan and Edward L. Holt
Racial Equity and the Legacy of the AAUP's Committee L
Building on the Association’s history with HBCUs.
By Marcus Alfred and Kelly Hand
The AAUP and the Angela Davis Case
Revisiting the AAUP's 1971 UCLA investigation.
By Emily Houh
AAUP Principles and the Long Struggle for Equality
Affirmative action and higher education for the common good.
By Risa L. Lieberwitz
Sociology as a Safe Haven amid Attacks on DEI (online only)
Why a key social science discipline matters for general education.
By Laura Sanchez and Meredith Gilbertson
When Fighting the Good Fight Means Decamping (online only)
Taking inspiration from past alternatives to traditional higher education.
By David J. Siegel
BOOK REVIEWS
Working for a Better World
Brian Henderson and Rob Kilgore review Lost in Work by Amelia Horgan.
College Radio as a Canary in the Coal Mine
Jeffrey Melnick reviews Live from the Underground by Katherine Rye Jewell.
Moving the Goalposts on Faculty Workloads
Tina M. Kelleher reviews Agile Faculty and Unraveling Faculty Burnout by Rebecca Pope-Ruark.
CHAPTER PROFILE
University of Pennsylvania AAUP Chapter
COLUMNS
From the Editor: Reconsidering the AAUP's History
Legal Watch: Defending Faculty Speech Rights in the Courts
From the President: The AAUP's Racial Equity Initiative
NOTA BENE
2023–24 AAUP Faculty Compensation Survey Results
AAUP Receives Mellon Grant for Academic Freedom Center
Good Decision for Tenure Rights at Tufts
National Day of Action for Higher Education
Gift from Academic Freedom Lecture Fund
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