On April 19, 1969, Cornell students made history when they occupied Willard Straight Hall after a year long struggle for a more inclusive and diverse University. 33 hours later their courageous stance led to the establishment of the Africana Studies and Research Center-- an internationally acclaimed institution that has been a leader in the field of Africana Studies ever since.

42 years later, the struggle continues...

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Statement of Solidarity with the Sojourner Tubman Collective

SAC adds its voice of enthusiastic support to the recently released statement from the Sojourner Tubman Collective, entitled "Women at Cornell in Defense of Ourselves."  The statement speaks volumes to the hostile conditions at Cornell University that have compelled these women to break the silence about the continued denigration of Black women on Cornell’s campus.

The piece outlines the racist and sexual harassment that Black women have historically faced at Cornell.  It reminds us that in 1969, the burning cross placed in front of Wari House, the Black women’s cooperative, was one of the most egregious publicly-recorded assaults on Black women at Cornell, and one of the most vicious hate crimes in the University’s history.  This crime against Black women was the precipitating event leading up the Willard Straight Takeover, making the defense of Black women a fundamental part of the foundation of Africana Studies at Cornell.

Moreover, the statement links the institutional attack on Africana, which has gotten a lot of press lately, to a heightened attack on Black women at Cornell:


We can only deduce from this choice that the new directors of Africana Studies, the first directors in the Center's history to have been selected without a vote or serious input from Africana faculty, reward the sexual harassment of Black women with a decision-making position.  Is this the beginning of a new phase of Africana leadership in which it is permissible to refer to Black women as "Black bitches"?

We agree with these assertions and with their conclusion, in which they demand Professor Grant Farred be removed from his recent appointment as chair of the Africana faculty search committee.  Big ups to the women of the Sojourner Tubman Collective for such a powerful and [hopefully] transformative message.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Center of Controversy: Africana Studies and Research Center leadership tumult creating conflict

Big thanks to Ithaca Times staff writer Michael Baker for his coverage of the ongoing struggle to save the Africana Studies and Research Center!  And thanks to ASRC faculty to speaking out!


"Center of Controversy: Africana Studies and Research Center leadership tumult creating conflict"

Tompkins County Legislature Calls for Open Process for Africana Center Realignment By a vote of 13-2

Legislature Calls for Open Process for Africana Center Realignment By a vote of 13-2

The Legislature urged Cornell University Administrators to engage in an open, inclusive process in implementing plans to restructure the University’s Africana Studies and Research Center, as they change it from the cross-disciplinary, intercollegiate unit that it has been since its founding in 1969 to an administrative unit with the College of Arts and Sciences.  (Legislators Dooley Kiefer and Carol Chock dissented.)  Legislators in June had declined to support a different resolution concerning Africana, requesting that the restructuring be delayed.  The latest resolution,/approved tonight, asks that Cornell administrators consider all implications of its realignment and encourages the University to commit itself to an open process with the support of the majority of Center faculty in selecting permanent leadership, and it strongly recommends that Center faculty be included in the process of the restructure.  It was noted that members and supporters of Africana have asked for the Legislature’s support on this issue.  Legislator Nathan Shinagawa said this resolution, unanimous supported by the budget committee and the Workforce Diversity and Inclusion Committee is forward-looking, and several Legislators who voted against the prior resolution said they were prepared to support the latest action.  Both Legislators Chock and Kiefer said they could not support the resolution, since they do not believe the Legislature should be weighing in on the matter.  Legislator Kathy Luz Herrera called it a “historic moment,” maintaining activism always has been, and should continue to be a part of Africana, and the issue is important, not only for the community of color, but for the entire community. Contact:  Legislator Leslyn McBean-Clairborne, Chair, Tompkins County Workforce and Inclusion Committee, 277-5104

Ithaca City Council Votes 7-3 in Support of the Africana Center!

Read the full story here!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

An Open Response to Dean Peter Lepage’s Plans for Africana Studies at Cornell University

September 12, 2011

As alumni of the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University, we are deeply troubled by the most recent development regarding the Africana Center’s future.  In a recent Cornell Chronicle article, Peter Lepage, Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, announced his plans for the Africana Center to “flourish” at Cornell University.  Beneath a camouflage of concern, this decree rests on blatant misinformation and a
reckless disregard for the integrity of Africana Studies and—by extension—the credibility of Cornell University as an institution of higher learning.

Over the past year, Provost Fuchs and Dean Lepage have repeatedly implemented unilateral mandates that are in direct opposition to the Africana Center’s best interest, and now the Center has, in effect, been placed in receivership. Cornell’s administrators have flagrantly violated even the most fundamental concepts of faculty governance. They have refused to acknowledge and to consider the national outcry and advocacy for the
inclusion of Africana faculty voices in the process of reconfiguring the Center’s relationship to the university. Instead of engaging in open and honest dialogue, Provost Fuchs, with the support of President Skorton and now Dean Lepage, have operated in a tyrannical and despotic manner—with a penchant for decree over dialogue. The authoritarian and destructive processes by which this restructuring plan has transpired evoked condemnation from members of the Africana faculty, the two leading professional organizations in the field (the National Council for Black Studies and the Association for the Study of African American Life and History), numerous alumni, students, the country’s leading Black intellectuals and more than 2,500 petitioners.

Furthermore, Provost Fuchs also refused to even meet with Africana Studies and Research Center alumni. This blatant disregard for the integrity of Africana Studies and its constituent community of scholars, activists and students raises serious questions about the credibility of the leadership at Cornell University. There was indeed widespread and diverse opposition to Provost Fuchs’s move to undermine the Africana Studies and Research Center. However, it is also clear that leading Black intellectuals were among the most vocal critics. We believe that the ease with which the Cornell administration dismissed national calls for an alternative course of action is rooted in an underlying racist paternalism which has no place in an academy of higher learning.
We are also appalled at the distortions and outright misinformation in Dean Lepage’s announcement, which reflects the “official line” put forth by Provost Fuchs. As a result, we would like to clarify several key points:

1. PhD PROGRAM—The Africana Center’s faculty members were already developing plans for a PhD program long before the Provost announced his plans to move the Africana Center. The Africana faculty had been discussing a PhD program for some time, and began drafting plans to establish the PhD program as early as 2005. The Provost and Dean have continued to spin the story as if they somehow granted the PhD program as a gift and a sign of good favor to the Africana Center. This is patronizing and downright dishonest. Moreover, we insist, as we have previously, that there is nothing about the nature of a PhD program which requires the Africana Center to be housed within the College of Arts and Sciences. If Cornell University is committed to creating a PhD in Africana Studies and would like to dedicate funds to that effort, then they should feel free to do so under the same administrative structure that has allowed Africana Studies to thrive for more than 41 years. Instead, in a disturbingly paternalistic fashion that evokes centuries of institutional racism, Cornell’s administration is only willing to infuse money into Africana Studies if the
Africana faculty is stripped of control over every aspect of the program including hiring, promotion and tenure, curriculum development, and faculty governance.

2. LEADERSHIP—In his recent announcement, Dean Lepage stated, “Over the past several months, the College Deans and Provost Kent Fuchs worked with Africana faculty to identify new leadership…Ultimately, we weren’t able to identify a faculty member who was both willing to serve and acceptable to a substantial majority of the Africana faculty…” This is a blatant lie. There are faculty members in the Africana Center who are willing and able to serve in the capacity of Director, and faculty members should be afforded the opportunity, as they have in the past, to hold elections and to determine their own fate. Yet, here again, the administration has held true to its recent pattern of excluding faculty participation, dialogue, and democratic rule in favor of authoritarian fiat. Perhaps most disturbingly, the administration’s choice to place the Africana Center under the control of two Associate Deans, neither of whom has any academic background in
Africana Studies, is tantamount to placing the Center into receivership. Such extreme action should only be taken when a department is bereft of leadership, and there is no other recourse. That is certainly not the case here, and this administrative abuse of power is absolutely unwarranted.

3. HIRING—Both Dean Lepage and Provost Fuchs have made promises to increase
the faculty of the Africana Center. However, they hinted at a process that favors joint appointments (though they have remained secretive about this initiative).  Such an approach would undermine the Center’s longstanding ability to control its own hiring practices, tenure processes and allocation of faculty lines. Africana will, instead, be forced to hire and tenure only at the whim and discretion of other departments. This is a crucial point—one that has been largely overlooked, but is central to the fate of Africana Studies at Cornell and across the nation. For many of us, the actions of the Provost and Dean harken back to the 1997-1998 Humanities Report, which advocated for Africana Studies to be housed in Arts and Sciences on the grounds that the Africana Center posed an “especially difficult problem for University politics and policies.” In short, the report demanded that Africana be relocated under the jurisdiction of Arts and Sciences because the university administration wanted greater control over the Center politically, socially, and economically. Ironically, the Humanities Report—once it was exposed—went down to crushing defeat because, as the report itself acknowledged, “It would be shortsighted to envisage reforms or radical restructuring of departments and programs on the basis of misperceptions, poorly informed investigations, dubiously conceptualized arguments, or extremely limited visions of the University and its needs. It is all too easy to destroy strengths through ill-conceived innovations and institutional schemes.”  (Emphasis added). Yet, here we are, more than a decade later, and the university has done precisely what it warned against. Administrators have destroyed one of the university’s true strengths, by implementing ill-conceived innovations and schemes. If the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell can be stripped of the right of faculty governance and denied the ability to be self-determining in regards to hiring, tenure, curriculum, and all other matters, every department across the nation is at risk.

4. FUNDING, ENDOWMENTS, & GIFTS OF CONVENIENCE—Over the past several months, both Dean LePage and Provost Fuchs have continued to make public announcements about increased funding, endowed chairs and other gifts to
be granted to the Africana Center. Yet none of these things have been documented on paper, or articulated with any specificity. Instead, they are nothing more than empty promises that have conveniently projected a false picture of administrative support to the public. Moreover, as additional evidence of its disregard for the Africana faculty, the administration has not discussed any of its plans directly with the faculty. Administrators have chosen, instead, to hand down decrees rather than to engage and to consult with their own faculty. Indeed, over the course of the past year, the Africana faculty has received most of the administration’s announcements concerning Africana’s future at the same time as the rest of the general public. This level of disrespect would not be tolerated in any other department, and should not be acceptable in Africana Studies either.

5. DISMANTLING OF BLACK ADVOCACY PROJECTS ON CAMPUS—The
restructuring of Africana is emblematic of a larger assault on Black advocacy projects at Cornell University. This move is an extension of the decline of Ujamaa Residential College, in which longtime residential housing Director Ken Glover was removed—with no explanation or justification—despite widespread support among faculty, parents and students. Additionally in June 2011, the administration restructured and diminished COSEP, the program designed to recruit and support the matriculation of Black and minority students. These decisions are part of a larger political project to dismantle many of the hard-won gains of Black students over the last 40 years and to punish those who maintain that legacy. The dismissal, disrespect, and alienation of certain faculty,
community members and programs are tantamount to political persecution, and
such behavior must be nipped in the bud before similar trends are allowed to flourish across the country.

Finally, as alumni, we want to reiterate our strong opposition to the administration’s conspiratorial decision to appoint Associate Deans Elizabeth Adkins and David Harris as the new “leadership” of the Africana  Center. Not only is this move unprecedented in Cornell’s history; we also believe it to be regressive and colonial in nature. If “faculty enthusiasm is critical to effective long-term leadership,” as Dean Lepage contends, then why hold the Africana Center hostage under an externally appointed administrative regime? As the administration moves forward with its plans for the Africana Studies and Research Center, it must understand that the manner in which it has facilitated this move has not only compromised the integrity of Africana, but it has undermined the integrity of Cornell University in general. This deceptive, dishonest and unethical behavior is shameful for an institution of higher learning and directly contradicts the very principles that Cornell claims to espouse.

Leslie M. Alexander, Ph.D.
Jared Ball, Ph.D.
Monique Bedasse, Ph.D.
Scot Brown, Ph.D.
Alyssa Clutterbuck
Jonathan B. Fenderson, Ph.D.
Frances Henderson, Ph.D.
Keisha Hicks
Jody-Anne Jones
Candace Katungi
Jimmy Kirby, Jr.
LaTaSha Levy
Yusuf A. Muhammad, Jr.
K. Terrence Oliver
Saira Raza
Ann Wilde
Benjamin Woods

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Speaking Truth to Power: SAC Presents their Evidence to the President and Provost! Listen HERE!!

This afternoon, following nearly 6 months of unreturned calls, emails, and letters, representatives from the Save Africana Center Action Committee sat down with President Skorton and Provost Fuchs to provide the "ample evidence" required for the Provost to "happily change his mind" about moving the Center into the College of Arts and Sciences.

The hour-long meeting was organized around four major themes: communication and community engagement; the implications of a structural shift into Arts and Sciences; historical context and contemporary struggles; and the hostile/racist climate that has continued to emerge on campus for nearly fifty years.

SAC was granted permission to record the discussion.  It's long but worth listening to in it's entirety.  We'll let you be the judge as to whether "ample evidence" had been provided....

You can access the full recording here!   BOOM.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Cornell Students Stand in Solidarity with the Campaign to Save Africana!

This statement appeared in the Cornell Daily Sun on April 29, 2011.  The Daily Sun refused to include credentials/affiliations with the signatures, but we have included them here to demonstrate the range of support that cuts across Cornell's degree programs, departments, and student organizations.

Statement of Solidarity with Save Africana Center (SAC) Campaign and ASRC Students, Staff, and Faculty
To Cornell University President Skorton and Provost Fuchs:

In response to the recent announcement that the administration plans to increase the funding support for the Africana Center, we the undersigned stand in solidarity with the statements and actions of the Save Africana Center Campaign and the Africana Center students faculty and staff as expressed in the public letters which were published in The Cornell Daily Sun on the 5 of April, 2011. Additionally, we declare our continued support for the call to suspend the decision to move Africana into the jurisdiction of Arts & Sciences so that the next step can be made collaboratively amongst those who are directly impacted by and invested in this decision.

Although we appreciate that increased funding has material value and may constitute a gesture of support, the offer of additional financial resources does not address the reasoning behind the nation-wide public condemnation of the administration’s decision. In many respects this surge in funding serves to simply obscure rather than confront the issue at hand. The fundamental issues of the center’s autonomy in regards to budgeting, hiring of faculty and maintaining a unique pedagogy remain unaddressed. The statements from Africana members and SAC have consistently spoken to the ways in which Africana stands to be undermined by being moved into Arts & Sciences. Providing more resources without addressing this concern constitutes continued misunderstanding of the issue.

In a time when Cornell is under financial duress, it is more critical than ever to do the best job possible to use our resources in effective and pragmatic ways. This means drawing on the incredible resources available to us as a community, including a shared commitment to continuing support for the Africana Center. With the social capital built by SAC through connecting a highly powerful network of alumni, Black and Africana studies scholars from across the country, and the energy and commitment on campus from students, staff, and faculty- we stand poised to make a move that will allow the Africana Center to remain a preeminent source of scholarship and expand the horizons of Africana studies for generations to come. We want a reporting structure that works; one in which self determination and collective responsibility is maximized, for all involved. We want to rebuild the sense of community that has been lost as a result of these decisions.

All of this will only be possible through the suspension of the decision to move Africana and a commitment to come to the table with authentically open dialogue, humility and respect. There is far too much at stake to proceed in any other way.

signed,

John Adam Armstrong
Grad, Education
Adult & Extension Education
Cornell Education Matters

Cymone D. Bedford
Grad, Regional Planning
President, Planning Students for Diversity

Rachael Blumenthal
Industrial & Labor Relations ‘12
Vice President, Cornell Students Against Sweatshops
Cornell Organization for Labor Action
Facilitator, Consent Education

Alex Bores
Industrial & Labor Relations ‘13
Vice President for Community Outreach, Half In Ten Cornell
Cornell Students Against Sweatshops

Hannah Chatterjee
History ‘13
Watermargin Education Program, co-chair

Jason Corwin
Grad, Natural Resources/ American Indian Program

Jesse Delia
Grad, Natural Resources
Cornell Education Matters

Victoria Demchak
Grad, Regional Planning

Omar Figueredo
Grad, Romance Studies

Sarah Ghermay
Industrial & Labor Relations ‘11
Co-chair, Black Students United

Megan Gregory
Grad, Horticulture
Cornell Education Matters

Cassy Griff
Latino Studies Program/Feminist, Gender & Sexuality Studies ‘11
Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship

Cassandravictoria Innocent
Grad, Genetics-Biophysics

Julie Jacoby
Grad, History

Lawrence Lan
Asian American Studies ‘11
Co-president, Asian Pacific Americans for Action

Aaron Law
Grad, History

Irene Li
College Scholar Program/Feminist, Gender & Sexuality Studies ‘12
Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship

Allison E Lupico
Grad, Industrial & Labor Relations

Kevin McGinnis
Government/German ‘13
President of United for Peace and Justice in Palestine
Treasurer of Intellectual Diversity Association

Ashley E. McGovern
J.D. '13, Cornell Law School
B.A. '08, Government/Feminist, Gender, & Sexuality Studies
President, Lambda LGBTQ Law Students Association
President, National Lawyers Guild

Zach Murray
Africana Studies/City & Regional Planning ‘13
Co-chair, Black Students United

Dean Darwin Oliver
Sociology/Law & Society ‘12
Ujamaa Residential Advisor
Men of Color Council
Chosen Generation Gospel Choir

Perla Parra
CIPA Fellow
Senior Managing Editor, public policy journal The Current
President, Cornell Women in Public Policy
Chair, Latino Graduate Student Coalition
Cornell Education Matters

Scott Perez
Grad, American Indian Program/Natural Resources

Lauren Tsuji
Architecture, Art & Planning '11
Co-President, Asian Pacific Americans for Action

Rosalind Usher
Sociology/Inequality Studies/Africana Studies ‘11
Resident Advisor, Ujamaa Residential College
Cornell Tradition Fellow
Senior Week Co-Chair, Class of ‘11 Council
Public Relations Chair, CU-Tonight Funding Commission
Publicity Chair, Les Femmes de Substance
Co-Editor-in-Chief, IMARA Magazine  

Kimberly Vallejo
Cornell Institute for Public Affairs Fellow
Cornell Education Matters

Felema B. Yemane
Architecture/Africana Studies/Dance ‘14
Campus Liaison, Black Students United
Chair, Black History Month for Cornell (2011)
Ivy League Council, Liaison VP of Programs
Cornell Tradition Fellow
Director of Programming and Outreach, American Institute of Architecture Students

*Note - These signatures are in no way exhaustive of the ever increasing support for the Save Africana Campaign.  For a more comprehensive list of support please see the signature section of our petition.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

"A Luta Continua"

On April 19, 2011 SAC screened a rough cut of "A Luta Continua" during the Willard Straight Take-Over Commemoration to look at how far we have come in the Campaign to Save Africana!  Please check out the final version below, and please share widely.  It's TIME TO GO VIRAL FOLKS!!  


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

National Call in Days a SUCCESS!

Thank you to everyone who called the President, Provost, and Chairman of the Board of Trustees over the past two days (and double thanks to those of you who called more than once!).  We feel confident that the call in was a success, with reports coming in from all over the country that allies had called and left a message telling the administration that they support the full reversal of the decision to restructure the ASRC!!

Today some folks reported that their call had gone in straight to voicemail-- word on the street is Skorton and Fuchs are out of town for the month.  We imagine we jammed up the lines so much on the 18th that we were sent to voicemail today.  This is actually a great opportunity, though.  Just because tomorrow is the 20th doesn't mean we have to stop calling, especially if we can leave the administrators actual voicemails!

KEEP THE CALLS COMING!

Also, a big thanks to the Administrative staff in Day Hall who fielded our calls-- we're sorry we had to put you in the middle of this struggle, but we really appreciate how receptive to us you were.  We look forward to hearing from the big guys when they return to campus!

Save Africana Banner Drop!

This afternoon a banner reading "Save Africana: History. Memory. Dialogue. Hope" was dropped from the McGraw Clocktower as part of the efforts to commemorate the 42nd Anniversary of the Willard Straight Hall takeover.  The banner was up for about 20 minutes before it was taken down.  That was long enough to send a message to the Cornell community about the unacceptability of the Provost's decision.  The prospective students and their parents were especially interested in today's actions--  we'll bet the parents were thinking twice about sending their children to the "caring community" at Cornell!

Please stay tuned for more updates about today's rally, march, press coverage, and other events!




Monday, April 18, 2011

THIS JUST IN:

Provost Fuchs stated: "If there is ample evidence that the Center would be stronger by continuing to report to me instead of being part of a college, and that it's best for the University, I'd be happy to change my mind"    


I'd be happy to change his mind!  Wouldn't You?

PLEASE CALL/FAX HIM TODAY

(607) 255-2365 fax: (607) 255-9924 

or email at provost@cornell.edu and 

reference this article!



While your at it...Contact the President too!

(607) 255-5201 fax: (607) 255-9924

email: president@cornell.edu

 

Ithaca College's Center for the Study of Culture, Race, and Ethnicity State their Support for the Save Africana Campaign!

Last week the Cornell Daily Sun printed a solidarity statement written by Dr. Asma Barlas, Director of Ithaca College's  Center for the Study of Culture, Race and Ethnicity, and her colleagues.  Dr. Barlas and the faculty at CSCRE firmly reject the Provost's decision to restructure the Africana Studies and Research Center.  The following clip is an excerpt from their letter.  Click on the text to read the full solidarity statement! And many thanks to Dr.Barlas and the rest of the CSCRE community for standing alongside SAC in their struggle to Save Africana.


There’s an old saying in freedom struggles: “If they take you in the morning, they will come for us that night.” Heeding that important lesson, the Center for the Study of Culture, Race and Ethnicity at Ithaca College stands in solidarity with the Africana Studies and Research Center  and its supporters in our struggle to keep Africana’s institutional positioning at Cornell.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Howard University Students Speak Out!

Please check out an interview with Howard University Students discussing the campaign to Save the African Studies and Research Center on Washington DC's Pacifica Radio WPFW 89.3.   
Special Thanks to Symone Wilson, Benjamin Woods (ASRC alum), and Iyelli Ichille!

To Listen Click here and Select the "Voices with Vision 2011-04-12 Comp" broadcast (#77).  The discussion begins at the 19:40 mark and ends at about 30:16.

University of Cincinnati Students Spread the Word!

Special thanks to Ekundayo Igeleke, Brittany Carthen and Brandon Harper from the University of Cincinnati for making an information flier to help build awareness about our campaign at the University of Cincinnati and Xavier University.

Click on the image below for a great example of how you can spread the word wherever you may be!

Monday, April 11, 2011

SAC Shares information about the Campaign at the 'Dismantling Ethnic Studies in Arizona" Lecture!

Last week, members of SAC attended an event on campus titled "Dismantling Ethnic Studies in Arizona." Following the lecture, SAC representative Alyssa Clutterbuck was invited speak to participants about the ongoing struggle to preserve the autonomy and integrity of the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell.  Check out her presentation below.  Also, apologies in advance for the poor quality of the video. If you turn up your volume you can at least hear what Alyssa had to say to the group!


SAC Responds to President Skorton's Interview with the Cornell Daily Sun!!

Hi folks,

Sorry for the delay in updating... rest assured that we've been hard at work for the past week!  Here is the first of several updates!

Last week, representatives from the Save Africana Committee submitted an editorial letter responding to Skorton's interview with the Cornell Daily Sun.  


The letter is titled "Misrepresenting the Facts."  Read it HERE in it's entirety!

Additionally, SAC core member and Ithaca Resident Greg Rothman had an editorial about the interview published in the Tompkins Weekly.  You can read his letter by clicking on the image below!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Dr. Robert Harris Responds to Thursday's Announcement in The Chronicle about Africana Budget Increase

On March 31, an announcement was made that the Africana Studies and Research Center would receive a substantial budgetary increase next academic year.  The text of the announcement read accordingly:

The budget for the Africana Studies and Research Center will be raised by more than 50 percent over the next five years, from a current base budget of $2.3 million to $3.5 million. In addition, there will be a one-time infusion of $2 million to recruit new faculty, support research and develop a new Ph.D. program.

In December 2010, the provost requested from the College of Arts and Sciences and the director of the center a five-year plan, which was submitted in early March. This week's decision on Africana Studies was sent out at the same time budgets for 2012 -- which include $31 million in reductions already scheduled in other units -- were issued to all deans and vice presidents from Provost Kent Fuchs and Vice President for Planning and Budget Elmira Mangum.

"I am glad to support this strong budget proposal which I have reviewed with the dean of Arts and Sciences and with the director of Africana. We are committed to Cornell's Africana Center becoming a top five program in the nation, and this support will help make that possible," said Fuchs.
The provost announced in December that he would transfer oversight of the center from his office to Cornell's College of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1, 2011. It will remain both a center and an academic department; the director will also be the department chair with the same authority and influence over the budget as any other department chair in the college.

"Funding for program development and the additional faculty lines will strengthen the center and position it for success," said Fuchs. "There's a very strong commitment on the part of the university to ensuring that the Africana Center becomes a more vibrant part of our academic and scholarly community."


In response to this announcement, Dr. Robert Harris has released a statement rejecting the Administration's claim that is implicated in this decision:
AN OPEN LETTER TO PROVOST W. KENT FUCHS
3 April 2011
W. Kent Fuchs

Provost

300 Day Hall

Cornell University


Dear Provost Fuchs:

Your statement in the Cornell Chronicle Online, March 31, 2011, egregiously misrepresents me and severely impugns my integrity.  The article reports that you “…requested from the College of Arts and Sciences and the director of the center a five-year plan, which was submitted in early March.”  On January 5, 2011, I wrote to Vice Provost Alice Pell that: “I do not have support within the Africana Center to engage in such discussions (with the College of Arts & Sciences) at this juncture.  Unfortunately, I think that we are at an impasse.  The Africana Center faculty will meet at the beginning of the spring semester and only with their permission will I engage in budget discussions.”  I have maintained that position and made it clear that I could not discuss a budget within the context of a move into the College of Arts & Sciences.

It is disingenuous for you to say that you have reviewed a budget proposal with me.  I have discussed our budget for the 2011-2012 academic year with Vice Provost Pell, and as you know, I have been foremost concerned about protecting our faculty lines.  When you indicated to me in late November that you planned to move the Africana Center into the College of Arts & Sciences, I submitted my resignation to you and only continue to serve as director at the request of the Africana Center faculty.  You state that I support your proposed budget and imply the same for the restructuring of the Africana Center, which is blatantly incorrect.  If you have anything in writing directly from me to the contrary, kindly present it.

We have asked several times for you to rescind your decision, to clear the deck and to start anew.  On February 24th, we even suggested a compromise for you given the tense atmosphere to at least suspend your decision to enter a discussion with open minds to seek the best solution to address our mutual needs and interests.  You rejected our overture  to discuss this matter with the type of courtesy, decency, and respect that we deserve no less as Cornell faculty than as human beings.

Sincerely,

Robert L. Harris Jr.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Members of the AS&RC and Save Africana Committee Reach out to the Ithaca Community! Thanks to the GIAC for Sponsoring the Meeting!

This evening members of the Africana Studies and Research Center and Save Africana Committee traveled down the hill to bring the issues Africana is facing to the greater Ithaca community!  Big thanks to the Greater Ithaca Activities Center (GIAC) for hosting this important event.  The meeting was packed full with leaders, lifetime and longtime residents, and ASRC alums who live in Ithaca.  We used the forum to generate ideas for collaborating with other local political and racial justice movements in Tompkins County. Please stay tuned for video footage covering the event!


Representatives from the Save Africana Committee bringing information to Ithaca residents

AS&RC Alumna and current History PhD candidate Candace Katungi describes her reaction to the Provost's unilateral decision to restructure the AS&RC

AS&RC Graduate Student Alyssa Clutterbuck debunks the myths the administration has been using to justify their autocratic decision

Ithaca resident and SAC member Greg Rothman invites members of the greater Ithaca community to join in the struggle to save the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell

Undergraduate and SAC Member Kristin Herbeck describes several upcoming actions and ways to get involved in the struggle.

AS&RC Founder and longtime faculty member Dr. James Turner warns the community about the implications of the Provost's decisions for other Ethnic Studies programs at Cornell and across the country

Alyssa Clutterbuck fields questions from the Ithaca community

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Crisis in Black Higher Education: An Interview with Africana Faculty

Please click on the link below to view an interview with Professor James Turner, Professor Robert Harris, Professor N'Dri Assie-Lumumba, and Professor Abdul Nanji, which details many of the issues concerning the unilateral decision to move the Africana Studies and Research Center into the College of Arts & Sciences.  http://blip.tv/file/4922632

Special thanks to Cornell Alumna Anika Daniels-Osaze for her TV show Crisis in Black Higher Education, and for conducting and publicizing this important interview.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

National Council of Black Studies Supports the ASRC!

David J. Skorton
President Cornell University
Office of the President
300 Day Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853

Dear President Skorton,

I write in my capacity as President of the National Council for Black Studies, the discipline's oldest and largest professional organization.  For more than three decades, we have been... engaged directly in the professionalization of the discipline through undergraduate and graduate curricular development, site visits and program reviews, sponsoring foundation funded workshops for new unit administrators, junior faculty, and graduate students. In addition, occasionally, we have engaged university administrators on behalf of local campus members and the national Black/African Studies community.

In March of the 2011, at our 35th annual meeting, the National Council for Black Studies (NCBS) will honor Dr. James Turner for his seminal service to the discipline of Black/Africana Studies.  We will honor Dr. Turner because he has embodied the highest value of our discipline—he is a scholar-activist that contributes to our discipline's intellectual and social missions.  He has helped chart the direction of Black/Africana Studies for forty years. With the faculty, Dr. Turner guided the Africana Studies and Research Center to stellar national and international reputations.  We will honor Dr. Turner for his scholarship, national and international engagement in social justice policy, and perhaps most of all for his role as an institution-builder.

In large part due to Dr. Turner's vision, the Africana Studies Research Center has been not just a contributor, but also a model for the discipline.  The ASRC's prominence in and importance to the discipline has much to do with its institutional arrangement.  The current arrangement-reporting and funding directly to the Provost office-has contributed mightily to ASRC's ability to attract and tenure an outstanding faculty and produce several cohorts of undergraduate and graduate students.  A rather large number of ASRC graduates have gone on to receive the PhD or professional degrees or to assume important positions in public education or business and social service.  Moreover, several graduates have had a tremendous impact on Black/Africana Studies, as well as the professions of law, and several other other disciplines.  Some of ASRC's more prominent graduates include Kenneth A. McClane, critical race legal scholar, Kimberley Crenshaw, award-winning novelist Ernest Hill, literary scholar, former Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee leader, James Forman, and professors Kwesi Konadu, Tamara Beauboeuf Lafontant, Ayele Bekerie, Scot Brown and Leslie Alexander.

Tales of bitter hiring and tenure battles between Africana/Black Studies units in colleges of arts and sciences have achieved an apocryphal status.  Because of its institutional architecture, ASRC has largely evaded the debilitating hiring and tenure battles endemic to Africana/Black Studies departments located in liberal arts colleges, especially those with joint appointment positions.  Thus, it is curious that Provost Fuchs proposed downgrade of ASRC would engross it in precisely the type of entanglements that have proven a daunting challenge at most institutions.

Perhaps the three most troubling aspects of Provost Fuchs decision are its abrogation of faculty governance, its inability to envision Black/Africana Studies as an academic discipline, and its subjugation of ASRC's interests to those of other units.  As suggested by his December 2, 2010 statement in the Cornell Daily Sun, Provost Fuchs apparently, without prior consultation with ASRC's faculty determined to relocate the center under the College of Arts and Sciences.  Without input from the center's faculty one wonders if and to what extent Provost Fuchs incorporated information on how ASRC's institutional arrangement contributed to its success.  Provost Fuchs statement masks what appears to be an inability to view Africana/Black Studies as an autonomous academic discipline.  Perhaps unbeknown to him, his reference of the programs at Harvard and Yale is viewed quite ominously by the national Africana/Black Studies community.  At this point neither Harvard's or Yale's programs have the capacity to hire and tenure without the approval of another department.  Nor do they grant an independent PhD; they offer what is actually either a graduate concentration or a dual degree.  Be definition, these colonial arrangements deny the intellectual integrity of the discipline of Black/Africana Studies.  Thus, it is not surprisingly that Provost Fuchs's decision has again shined an unflatteringly light on Cornell's racial practices and made it the subject of another national campaign against racial discrimination. Can one imagine a history, sociology or a literature department that would be largely constrained to hire or tenure in conjunction with another unit?

Related to the issues of faculty governance and disciplinary autonomy is the question of the role Provost Fuchs envisions ASRC playing inside the College of Arts and Sciences.  Despite the "offer" of a PhD program, it appears that a major rationale for moving ASRC into the College of Arts and Sciences is to accommodate the college's and other units' "interest" in Black/Africana Studies.  Often the "interest" of other academic units is not in Black/Africana Studies or one of its subfields but in accommodating the university's need to racially diversify its faculty.  In these situations, campus administrations treat Africana/Black Studies not as an academic unit, but as the main vehicle for achieving administration's diversification objects.  Racial diversity is obviously a goal we share, nevertheless, the traditional disciplines should be induced to fulfill racial diversification without dependence on joint appointments with Black/Africana Studies.

However, even when other units' "interest" is intellectual-a sincere desire to develop an Africana-focused field within their discipline history suggests they prefer to do so without using their own resources.  Caught in the crossfire, deans of arts and sciences often become the arbiters of these disputes.  Yet, the record on hiring and tenure disputes between Black/Africana Studies units and traditional departments reveals that historically they have been decided in the interest of the traditional unit.  Thus, one of the inequalities, in institutional arrangements like Harvard's and Yale's is that usually for at most half the investment, traditional disciplines gain veto power, in effect control over hiring and tenure decisions in joint appointments with Black/Africana Studies.  These arrangements have often encumbered Black/Africana studies units with their second or third choice, as traditional departments pursue the candidate that best meets their disciplinary conventions.  These logics privilege scholars that study Black people rather than Black/Africana Studies scholars.  By relocating ASRC into the College of Arts and Sciences, Provost Fuchs is subjecting it to the dominant logic of joint appointments between Black/Africana Studies units and the traditional disciplines.  To be blunt, he is creating a scenario in which ASRC will be subjugated to the "interests" of other academic units.

As we prepare for what should be the celebration of a life and career of one of our discipline's pioneers, we fear the event will be bittersweet.  We in the National Council for Black Studies, like the Black/Africana Studies community across the country are quite distressed over Provost Kent Fuchs arbitrary decision to abolish an important aspect of Dr. Turner's the life's work, the Africana Studies Research Center.  I must say, when I first heard of Provost Fuchs intention to abolish an institutional arrangement that has been highly successful for 40 years, I could not help but think of Arizona State Superintendent Thomas Horne and that state legislature's passage of HB2281, the anti-ethnic studies act. I suspect, you are recoiling from that comparison; however, I can assure you it is one that is being made throughout the national Black/Africana Studies community.  The two decisions are united by both Horne's and Fuchs's rejection of "Mexican American Studies" and "Black/Africana Studies" as intellectual areas and their denial of decades of success in favor of subordinating these units to allegedly "broader and better" initiatives.

This is a critical moment for Cornell University.  This situation plus the Grant Farred controversy has catapulted Cornell into the frontlines of racially challenged institutions.  President Skorton, you have an opportunity to reverse the descent of your institution.  We in the National Council for Black Studies trust that you will act to restore a highly successful institutional arrangement that has made Cornell one of the premier institutions in Black/Africana Studies.

Sincerely,

Sundiata Keita Cha-Jua,
President of the National Council for Black Studies
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Saturday, March 12, 2011

The Momentum Keeps Growing!!! Press Conference Draws the Attention of Local Filmmakers and Journalists!

Big thanks to Krissy for composing this mini-documentary of yesterday's set of actions to bring awareness of the SAC Campaign to the Cornell Board of Trustees!


Also many thanks to Aaron Munzer for his article which appeared in today's issue of the Ithaca Journal:


"Cornell Africana Center Students, Faculty Protest Administrative Change"

Friday, March 11, 2011

Save Africana Committee Brings Awareness of the Issues to the Board of Trustees!

This morning, member of the Save Africana Center and their allies braved the cold to show their support for the ASRC.  Several SAC members gained access to the Trustees' Open Meeting, where info packets were distributed and Candace was able to make some remarks to the Board. Check out the photos of some of us standing outside the Statler during the meeting and our video spoof of last December's meeting with the President and Provost in Willard Straight Hall!  Stay tuned for additional footage and reports from the press conference!   Thanks to everyone who came out this morning and made our actions a success!





Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Save Africana Campaign Garners Big Support from Distinguished Africana and African American Studies Scholars from Across the U.S.!

This full-page ad appeared in today's Cornell Daily Sun!  The Save Africana Committee thanks all of these important scholars for their support in our struggle!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

SAC Committee Pounds the Pavement, Petition Signatures Bypass 1,500!!

Thanks to everyone for your support!  Word about the Campaign to Save the ASRC is spreading fast.  Please join us in the struggle by signing our online petition and then forwarding it along to your friends, families, and colleagues:

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/saveafricana/

You can also help by submitting a photo or video statement in support of the Africana Center.  Please contact us if you're interested in doing so.  Its fast, easy, fun, and a great way to show university administrators that we're SERIOUS about full reversal of their unilateral decision to restructure the ASRC.

PS- BIG THANKS to Candace's mom for all of her hard work!

Friday, February 25, 2011

Special Thanks to the Intellectual Diversity Association!

For facilitating a great and much needed discussion.  We look forward to more open dialogue with students in the weeks to come.  


Let us know if you want us to come and speak with your student group!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

The Intellectual Diversity Association Presents: The Future of the Africana Center: Separating Myth from Reality

Friday February 25th at 3pm 
in Willard Straight Hall

In the wake of the last minute announcement by the Cornell Administration of its intention to reorganize the Africana Studies and Research Center, there has been much misinformation of students about what this really means for the center's staff and faculty, and ultimately its students.


IDA is giving you the opportunity to:
  • Come discover the implications of the move from an informed student and faculty base
  • Engage in discussion
  • Express your feelings about the matter


Brief lecture will be given by the Save the Africana Center (SAC) Campaign Group


Time and Venue: 
3:00pm, Friday February 25th (tomorrow!)
Art Gallery in Willard Straight Hall

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

The Struggle to Save the Africana Studies and Research Center makes the Ithaca Times! In other news, still no word from the Cornell Daily Sun...

Many thanks to Managing Editor Rob Montana for the article he ran today in the Ithaca Times, titled, "Africana Assault: Cornell Center's faculty, students, alumni fighting to retain identity in face of proposed changes."


You can read Montana's article in its entirety here.


Thanks for the support, Ithaca!  You're gorges!!!

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Intent, History and Legacy of Activism and Scholarship in Africana Studies: A Conversation with Dr. James Turner

The following is an excerpt from Voxunion.com, posted on February 17, 2011:

"Dr. James Turner is the founding director of the Africana Studies and Research Center established in 1969 at Cornell University.  Having himself been part of and impacted by burgeoning political and cultural movements from around the world he would become and has been among the most stalwart participants in what is often described as the intellectual arm of a continuing African world liberation struggle.  Among his many contributions academically and otherwise he has helped established and define the field now known as “Africana Studies.”  This field, as summarized by Dr. John Henrik Clarke, is meant to incorporate the experiences and histories of African people, collectively, studied as a whole, in an interdisciplinary fashion and disregarding the false literal and cognitive boundaries inspired by European imperialism."

Dr. James Turner, founding director of the Africana Studies and Research Center, walks across campus in the 1960s.
(Photo Provided by the Africana Studies and Research Center)

You can listen to the full conversation recorded and posted here.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

University Decisionmakers Strike Again: Proposed Move to American Indian Program Enrages Students and Faculty

"The following summary is borrowed from Lawrence Lan's February 11, 2011 Cornell Daily Sun article, titled "Proposed Move to American Indian Program Enrages Students and Faculty."  Read the full text here.

To the dismay of students and faculty, administrators of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences are proposing to move the American Indian Program from the fourth floor of Caldwell Hall — where it has been housed since the 1980s — to several separate offices in Kennedy Hall. Students and faculty first received notification of the proposal Feb. 1 and will meet with CALS administrators Friday.

“The [proposal for the move] has been made by Cornell, without consulting with the people most directly affected,” Scott Perez, grad, said. “The University is basically saying, ‘This is what we’re going to do, and now we can discuss tweaking it.’”

CALS administrators proposed relocating to minimize space limitations they fear will arise during the renovation projects in Stocking Hall, Fernow Hall, Rice Hall and Warren Hall, according to Senior Associate Dean of CALS Max Pfeffer.  

“[The notification] came down in e-mail — we had no prior word — as an order to move, and AIP reacted quickly to that,” said Prof. Eric Cheyfitz, director of the American Indian Program. "

Friday, February 4, 2011

Sign the Petition to Support the Autonomy of the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell!

Students stand in support of the Willard Straight Hall Takeover in 1969


Hi Everyone--

Thanks for visiting our website.  This site is currently under construction-- please check back next week for more information about organizing events, news and media updates, and much more!

In the meantime, please consider signing the Petition to Save the Africana Studies and Research Center!

You don't need to be a Cornell student (or even be affiliated with the university) to make a statement to President Skorton and Provost Fuchs that their unilateral decision-making is unacceptable, particularly considering the university was recently awarded the designation of an "Institution of Community Engagement" by the Carnegie Foundation!

We now have well over 1,000 signatures on the petition, but we need your support, as well!  Please read and sign our statement to the university administration today!


Please also consider checking out our blog and joining us on Facebook!  The Facebook site contains video footage, event announcements, and more!