CUCFA Welcomes Professor Napolitano to the Zoom Board; Calls on Her to Defend Academic Freedom

POSTED BY HANK REICHMAN

Former homeland security secretary and Arizona governor Janet Napolitano, who earlier this year stepped down as president of the University of California system after seven years and retreated to a faculty position in the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC Berkeley, has joined the Board of Zoom, the company announced November 2.  “Janet has extensive leadership experience in both education and government, two key segments of Zoom customers,” said Zoom CEO Eric S. Yuan. “She also has tremendous strength of character, which she demonstrated throughout her years in public service and academia, and is adept at decision-making and leading in complex organizations. I know she will be a valuable addition to our board.”  In response to her appointment, the board of the Council of University of California Faculty Associations (CUCFA) sent Napolitano the following letter:

November 6, 2020

Professor Janet Napolitano
Goldman School of Public Policy, UCB
2607 Hearst Avenue
Berkeley, CA 94720-7320

Dear Professor Napolitano,

We write to you as University of California colleagues and the Council of UC Faculty Associations board of directors to congratulate you on having been invited to join the board of Zoom. We take Zoom’s invitation to you as an implicit recognition that they have an urgent need to address their recent infringement on faculty free speech and academic freedom and, more generally, their relationship with higher ed institutions.

As you may be aware, on September 23, Zoom canceled a regular webinar-lecture also open to the broader public in a course taught at San Francisco State University. The webinar, titled “Whose Narratives: Gender, Justice and Resistance,” was sponsored by SFSU’s Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Studies Program and the Women and Gender Studies Department. The event was to feature several South African and American activists, as well as 76-year-old Palestinian feminist and member of parliament, Leila Khaled, who is also connected with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)–an organization that is on the US State Department’s list of “terrorist organizations.” Zoom cited anti-terrorism and other laws to justify canceling this reservation. But as numerous letters of protest by academics (including ours ​to President Drake dated 09/24)​ have made clear, Zoom’s position was not only on shaky legal grounds but in flagrant violation of the organizers’ academic freedom.

Despite strong letters of protest and condemnation by scholars and professional associations, the company has refused to respond or offer a concrete policy to ensure such censorship and violations of academic freedom do not occur again. We hope that your invitation to join the board represents Zoom’s attempt to place a greater emphasis on academic freedom and censorship issues going forward. Still, we are concerned such a policy change will not happen unless you use your position on the Board to act as a vocal representative of and advocate for the fullest measure of academic freedom and a prohibition of censorship of courses, meetings, and other educational classes, conferences, workshops and events using Zoom.

We call upon you publicly to declare your unequivocal support for these principles as a faculty member of the University of California and its former President. You should make it clear to Zoom that should the company engage in such a violation again, you would no longer be able to legitimate their business with the values of the University of California.

We look forward to your public statement and reply to this letter at the earliest possible time.

On behalf of the CUCFA Board,

Professor Constance Penley,
President, Council of UC Faculty Associations

Professor Wendy Matsumara,
Vice President, Council of UC Faculty Associations

One thought on “CUCFA Welcomes Professor Napolitano to the Zoom Board; Calls on Her to Defend Academic Freedom

  1. It’s a strange notion of academic freedom when it involves promoting terrorism and heroizing terrorists. Would an Adolf Hitler memorial lecture promoting Naizism also be covered by academic freedom according to the CUCFA and AAUP?

Comments are closed.

Discover more from ACADEME BLOG

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading