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Sent: December 19, 2013
To:
Dr. Roger Sublett
(President, Union Institute and University)
Dr. Chris Voparil
(Professor, Humanities Concentration, Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Studies program)
Dr. Arlene Sacks
(Dean, Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Studies program)
Dr. Nancy Boxill
(Professor, Leadership Concentration, Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Studies program)
Dear Dr. Sublett,
as an alumni of Union's M.Ed.
program, as well as a current student completing a dissertation in the
Interdisciplinary Studies program, I am thankful for your recent email,
of holiday greetings. Towards creating a more "engaging
and enlightening" community at our institution, I am writing today to
draw your attention to what I must assume is a gross oversight, on the
part of the administration at our institution.
I have been thankful to have received
a number of "From the President's Desk" missives throughout this year,
including one sent in commemoration of the anniversary of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.'s speech at the Lincoln
Memorial. However, upon the passing of Nelson Mandela-- the greatest
social justice hero of our time-- our institution has been silent. As
our institution continues to identify and strengthen lucrative academic
curricula, including the development and nurture
of a thriving undergraduate program in criminal justice, I believe our
school's acknowledgement of Mandela's passing is not only appropriate,
but perhaps an essential task, as an institution of higher learning that
seeks to better fulfill its mission. In conversations
on social media and elsewhere, friends and colleagues have questioned
Union's silence regarding Mandela's passing; one colleague of mine
suggested Union rename its MLK Studies thread to include formal study of Mandela's work as well. The lack of discussion,
or even acknowledgement, by our institution, regarding the passing of Nelson Mandela, is beyond troubling.
The administrators responsible for my program's Facebook
page have focused their efforts on creating 'buzz' about the upcoming
residency; however, these posts sum to create a vision of a program
struggling to discern
its own identity, without having much of anything of substance to say,
to students or a wider public. Other institutions have sought to embrace
social media as something other than a vehicle for admissions
campaigns; it is difficult for me to believe that
our institution, built of a doctoral-level community of learners, has
nothing to say about Mandela. While I understand that academic
institutions may be, by necessity, focused on self-promotion across
social media platforms, the absence of any acknowledgement
whatsoever of Mandela's passing, by an institution that professes to
foster serious academic study of individuals committed to social
justice, is simply inexcusable. I have faith that you will help remedy
this egregious error in short order.
I look forward to hearing from you,
as together we work to make Union Institute and University a place of
"engaging and enlightening" learning.
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Tuesday, December 31, 2013
An Open Letter to Roger Sublett, Union Institute and University
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