What Viewpoint Diversity Looks Like at the University of Virginia
An email from the Karsh Institute for Democracy arrived in my computer this morning, highlighting upcoming events at the University of Virginia. One event seemed to offer the potential for being non-ideologically loaded. Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy will explore American-Soviet relations through the prism of Soviet and American airmen on US air bases in the Ukraine during World War II.
But if you're looking for a variety of perspectives on the challenges and promises of democracy today — not a tangentially related curiosity from eighty years ago — you won't find it at Karsh this April.
There is nothing in the smorgasbord of democracy-related events that explore such themes as, say, the conditions required for wealth creation, the rise of America's cultural elites and concomitant alienation of the working or middle class, the government role in suppressing "misinformation," the political weaponization of the justice system, the impending fiscal collapse of the federal government, or other themes that — agree or disagree with them — are serious narratives worthy of consideration. One wonders if UVA's faculty and administrators even know such perspectives exist.
A review of other events highlighted by Karsh shows vividly how UVA has become an intellectual monoculture that explores only ideas that fall within a narrow partisan and ideological range. Join me as I tour the intellectual offerings provided by a university whose leadership touts its commitment to "viewpoint diversity."
An upcoming event will highlight a panel of photojournalists. "Join a distinguished panel of photojournalists — including Pulitzer Prize-winning photographers — as they explore how their profession keeps the public well-informed and share their perspectives on what it’s like to work in some of the most challenging areas in the world," says the promo copy.
But don't expect neutrality or objectivity in the following events.
Panel moderator Sanjay Suchak is a practitioner fellow in democracy at Karsh, writing in his bio that he "has extensively covered issues surrounding race, equity, white supremacy."
Adha Kumar, former director-general of the Indian think tank Delhi Policy Group, will address the future of democracy in India. The event description tips Kumar's ideological hand: "The modern Indian republic can now look and act like a totalitarian regime, it appears ever more necessary to synthesize the lessons learned." Narendra Modi, India's prime minister, has overseen unprecedented prosperity in the world's largest democracy but is regarded by some on the left as a Hindu nationalist and chauvinist, and his movement as an analogue to American white supremacists.
Andrew Kahrl, co-director of Karsh's Repair Lab, will discuss his new book, The Black Tax, which reveals "the shocking history and ruinous consequences of inequitable and predatory tax laws in this country. ... Throughout the 20th century, African Americans acquired substantial amounts of property nationwide. But racist practices, obscure processes, and outright theft diminished their holdings and their power."
One can hope that Mr. Karhl will leaven his expose by revealing how African Americans managed to acquire "substantial amounts of property" in the first place, or recount all the laws, regulations and practices enacted with the explicit goal of bolstering African-American wealth creation, or explore the theme of "the White tax" designed to transfer wealth from the affluent to the poor. But there is no hint of such perspectives.
Image of a fist from the CANVAS website
The Karsh email goes on to highlight the 2024 People Power Academy, asking the question, "What are the inner workings of autocratic repression and methods of nonviolent resistance?" The three-day event is hosted by CANVAS, a Serbia-based NGO co-founded by Karsh Institute Practitioner Fellow in Democracy Srđa Popović. CANVAS operates "a network of international trainers and consultants with expertise in building and running successful nonviolent movements."
A quick scan of the CANVAS website reveals no obvious partisan or ideological alignments — other than a "pro-democracy" bent — but images suggest an alignment in the US with more left-leaning movements. See the clenched-fist image and "Reform Amerika" sign in the website image above and the ideological rhetoric in the protest signs below. What cannot be denied is that non-violent "resistance" is a preoccupation of the political left in the US.
Putting Equity-Minded Policy into Practice
Darlene Flynn, director of the race and equity department for the city of Oakland, CA, joins the Karsh Institute's LEAD Working Group to discuss the successful strategies she’s adopted for developing a more just and equitable city."
Sacred and Profane Podcast, Season 4: Between Heaven and Earth
Ten episodes in the latest season of the Sacred and Profane podcast cover religions and climate change in America. How have religions shaped the climate crisis?"
Gun Violence Solutions Brown Bag Research Workshop
The Gun Violence Solutions Faculty Working Group at UVA is hosting a series of lunchtime workshops designed to share and discuss research on issues related to gun violence."
Building Bridges: Addressing Gun Violence Through Storytelling
A workshop to integrate critical perspectives on gun violence, foster interdisciplinary collaborations within UVA, and engage with Charlottesville community organizers. Lunch provided.
‘The People at the Grassroots Are on the Move': The Rebirth of Movement Activism in the Midst of the Reagan Revolution, 1978–'83
The next installment of the Karsh Institute's LEAD Working Group colloquium series this semester
There are other public-policy events at UVA. The Miller Center and the Center for Politics, for instance, host numerous speakers and seminars. These speakers do not hew consistently to one side of the ideological spectrum. Indeed, the Miller Center and the Center for Politics invite numerous establishment figures and even a few conservatives. But Karsh is arguably where UVA leadership's heart is and where the bulk of the funding is going.