| Author/Contributor(s): | Dershowitz, Alan |
| Publisher: | Skyhorse |
| Date: | 8/26/2025 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Alan Dershowitz poses four basic questions about the decision whether to defund or otherwise punish universities that discriminate against—or apply a double standard to—Jews as victims of discrimination.
- Is it ever permissible, as a matter of policy and academic freedom, to weaponize governmental funding of universities in an effort to influence their policies?
- Is it constitutional or otherwise legal to cut off governmental funding based on the content of university speech or policies?
- Is the Trump administration justified in defunding universities such as Harvard and Columbia for their failures to deal effectively with growing antisemitism on their campuses?
- Can the government deny student (or faculty) visas to individuals who advocate or promote antisemitism or other actions that violate American policies?
Among the reforms Dershowitz advocates are a return to meritocratic admissions and hiring; a return to rigorous blind grading; the end of the non-meritocratic diversity, equity, and inclusion bureaucracies; the application of a single standard of free speech, academic freedom, and discipline; and the end of ethnic, gender, regional, religious, sexual preference, and other identity-based departments, studies, programs, and other advocacy centers that have become incubators for anti-Jewish bigotry.