NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bok, Derek C. – Public Interest, 1980
Discusses the clash between federal government regulations and the university's right to be autonomous with regard to its own academic affairs. Presents the costs of and justifications for federal regulations. Suggests that subsidies, rather than regulations, are the best means for bringing about change while preserving diversity in universities.…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Civil Rights, College Admission, Colleges
Bok, Derek C. – 1979
A discussion of Harvard University's ethical responsibilities by the college's president considers the reasons why universities have traditionally been reluctant to take formal positions on ethical and political issues arising in the outside world. These reasons include a belief that such positions will establish an orthodoxy that may inhibit…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Administration, College Role, Conflict
Bok, Derek C. – 1979
The proposal that Harvard University sell its stock in American corporations in South Africa is discussed by the university's president. The proposal is based on the desire that the university respond as part of a pressure group using the leverage of purchases, endowment, and prestige as a university to push for social or political ends. Many…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Administration, College Role, Conflict
Bok, Derek C. – 1979
The question of what the university should do when it purchases goods and services from firms that are said to have acted improperly is considered by the president of Harvard University. It has been proposed that Harvard join national boycotts to force companies to stop engaging in specific practices that are thought to be improper. Several…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Administration, College Role, Conflict
Bok, Derek C. – 1979
The ethical problems of receiving funds and the objections raised by concerned members of the university community are discussed by the president of Harvard University. It is proposed that donations be rejected that force the institution to deviate from its chosen standards of admission, or permit the donor to determine the selection of professors…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Administration, Conflict, Educational Finance