Education

The Nikole Hannah-Jones tenure debate at UNC-Chapel Hill: What people are saying

READ MORE


The hire and the fury: Nikole Hannah-Jones at UNC

Read all of The News & Observer’s coverage of the University of North Carolina’s decision to hire the Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist and the controversy that ensued.

Expand All

The controversy over how UNC-Chapel Hill has handled the proposed faculty appointment of New York Times journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones has generated debate across the nation about academic freedom and integrity, race and gender discrimination, and the value of the Time’s 1619 Project, which was led by Hannah-Jones.

Here is a sampling of the discussion:

“The faculty and staff who are the heartbeat of our university aren’t here because it offers the best pay or has the most dynamic facilities. We are here because we believe in the promise of higher education, of academic freedom, in the idea that we can forge understanding out of debate, and that students of every perspective and background deserve our best. Access to ideas, opportunity and achievement for all is at the very center of UNC’s soul. We believe a university is where ideas are explored and big problems are tackled in an atmosphere of respect. We don’t expect our future to be shaped by politics or whims or fads — but by evidence and academic rigor. “

— Letter from Susan King, dean of the Hussman School of Journalism and Media, in The Daily Tar Heel on June 30.

“This intrusion of the board into decisions properly the purview of the Faculty puts at risk the bedrock assumptions of academic freedom and free intellectual inquiry and integrity. These assumptions are the base for the long, superb reputation of UNC-Chapel Hill and of the pre-eminence of US colleges and universities worldwide. It cannot stand. ... The Board’s denial of Hannah-Jones exemplifies a cultural, political and racial climate that questions the scholarship, accomplishments, and personhood of Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.”

— Letter signed by nearly 500 UNC-CH faculty and sent to trustees June 29 calling for the board to approve Hannah-Jones’s tenure appointment at their June 30 special meeting.

The board’s decision not to offer tenure to Hannah-Jones “sends the message to UNC’s remaining students and faculty that this institution is a place where scholarship about controversial ideas, including the history and current role of racism in the United States, cannot be critically examined and debated. “

— Letter signed by 500 parents of UNC students sent to trustees June 29.

“The (Board of Trustees’) decision to defer consideration of her appointment as a Knight Chair with tenure renews community concerns about the racial hierarchies that inform policy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.”

— Letter from the UNC School of Law faculty to the UNC Board of Trustees, shared on Twitter June 25.

“As a director of graduate studies, I question the ethics of recruiting Indigenous students and students of color to this place.”

— Sara Smith, associate professor of geography at UNC, in a letter sent to university administration and shared on Twitter June 25.

UNC-Chapel Hill Student Body President Lamar Richards speaks during a rally at the university Friday, June 25, 2021 demanding trustees approve tenure for Nikole Hannah-Jones, who created The New York Times’ ”1619 Project,” which explores the legacy and history of Black Americans and slavery.
UNC-Chapel Hill Student Body President Lamar Richards speaks during a rally at the university Friday, June 25, 2021 demanding trustees approve tenure for Nikole Hannah-Jones, who created The New York Times’ ”1619 Project,” which explores the legacy and history of Black Americans and slavery. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com


“I have spoken to over a dozen incoming undergrads of color and their families over the past week & have more scheduled. Many, if not all, of them are reconsidering coming to Carolina. And I firmly support that decision. I love my people too much & UNC is not worthy of us. Period.”

— Lamar Richards, UNC-CH Student Body President, in a June 15 tweet.

“The 1619 Project is a racially divisive and revisionist account of history that threatens the integrity of the Union by denying the true principles on which it was founded.”

Legislation filed by Sen. Thom Tillis of North Carolina and six other GOP senators in June to prohibit the use of federal funds to teach The 1619 Project in K-12 schools.

“I care deeply about freedom of speech and freedom of thought. I trust people to think critically, and I don’t think the university is a place where people ought to be afraid of ideas.”

— Kim Talikoff of Chapel Hill, who was protesting the UNC Board of Trustees at the group’s meeting in May.

A group of protesters, including Wanda Hunter, Doreen Stein-Seroussiand Kim Talikoff, gathered outside of the UNC Board of Trustees meeting Thursday, May 20, 2021, calling for tenure for Nikole Hannah-Jones.
A group of protesters, including Wanda Hunter, Doreen Stein-Seroussiand Kim Talikoff, gathered outside of the UNC Board of Trustees meeting Thursday, May 20, 2021, calling for tenure for Nikole Hannah-Jones. Martha Quillin mquillin@newsobserver.com


“You do not have to agree with Ms. Hannah-Jones’ conclusions in The 1619 Project to [speak out against her treatment by UNC]. You only have to agree that faculty voice must govern the tenure process for academic integrity to have meaning. If outside bodies, in this case the BOT, without subject matter expertise are the arbiters of faculty scholarship, all faculty members run the risk of being punished for work that questions the status quo, threatens some outside interest, or makes people uncomfortable.”

— UNC Faculty Chair Mimi Chapman, in an open letter June 20 to the university to take a stand in support of tenure of Hannah-Jones.

“The Board of Trustees’ disregard sets a dangerous precedent, as they sacrifice the education of past, present and future students by prioritizing politics over credentials. Particularly as the U.S. continues to heighten its awareness of racial disparities in our society, we are disappointed to see the UNC system continue to miss opportunities that would put us on the right side of history.”

— A letter signed by 10 members of the UNC Hussman School of Journalism and Media Alumni Board, published on Twitter May 21.

I think we know what this is all about. This is sort of about the right-wing truth assassins that don’t want people to know about the ... uncomfortable, truthful history about this country.”

— Sunny Hostin, co-host of ABC TV’s “The View,” during an on-air conversation on May 21.

“I worry about the controversy of tying the UNC journalism school to the 1619 project. Based on her own words, many will conclude she is trying to push an agenda, and they will assume she is manipulating historical facts to support it. If asked about it, I will have to be honest in saying I agree with the historians.”

— Walter Hussman in a December 2020 email to Susan King, dean of the journalism school at UNC that bears Hussman’s name because of his $25 million pledge to support it.

Walter Hussman (center) and his wife, Ben, (right) meet with Susan King, the dean of UNC’s School of Media and Journalism (left). The School of Media and Journalism will now be known as the Hussman School of Journalism and Media following a $25 million gift by alumnus Walter Hussman.
Walter Hussman (center) and his wife, Ben, (right) meet with Susan King, the dean of UNC’s School of Media and Journalism (left). The School of Media and Journalism will now be known as the Hussman School of Journalism and Media following a $25 million gift by alumnus Walter Hussman. UNC-Chapel Hill

“It is not our place to tell U.N.C. or U.N.C./Hussman who they should appoint or give tenure to. It is, however, clear to us that Hannah-Jones is eminently qualified for the appointment, and we would urge the trustees of the University of North Carolina to reconsider their decision within the time frame of our agreement.”

— May statement from Alberto Ibargüen, president of the Knight Foundation, which funds the chair Hannah-Jones was awarded.

“This unprecedented decision to treat Hannah-Jones differently from previous Knight Chairs underscores the continued mistreatment and disrespect shown to many Black scholars and professionals at the university. In addition, the lack of transparency amongst university trustees and senior administration in this disturbing case further inflames the perception of failed leadership in matters of cultural competence, inclusivity, and racial justice.”

— June 22 statement by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro NAACP.

“UNC’s hiring Hannah-Jones signals a degradation of journalistic standards, from one in which ethics and truth are prized to one in which a writer’s work is judged according to whether it serves a preferred political agenda.”

— Jay Schalin, director of policy analysis at the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal.

“Walking into this University, unfortunately, you are walking into a place where respect is minimal, criticism is high, and quantity is all too few for academics of color — especially Black women. Knowing this and recognizing the critical importance of upholding the integrity and impact of your work, we cannot ask you to come here. We respect your work and your contribution to this country’s history too much for you or your scholarship to be the constant target of disrespect here at Carolina, be it from our leaders in South Building, the Board of Trustees, or Board of Governors.”

— An open letter to Hannah-Jones signed by 31 student leaders and advocates published in May.

“This fight is not about me.”

— Nikole Hannah-Jones, in a May 26 Tweet thanking 1,619 UNC students and alumnae for a two-page ad in The News & Observer calling for the university to grant tenure to Hannah-Jones.

A two two-page ad by UNC alumni in The News & Observer says UNC’s lack of tenure “is an attempt to penalize Nikole Hannah-Jones for her groundbreaking and unvarnished reporting of American history.”
A two two-page ad by UNC alumni in The News & Observer says UNC’s lack of tenure “is an attempt to penalize Nikole Hannah-Jones for her groundbreaking and unvarnished reporting of American history.”


This story was originally published June 26, 2021 at 9:00 AM.

Martha Quillin
The News & Observer
Martha Quillin writes about climate change and the environment. She has covered North Carolina news, culture, religion and the military since joining The News & Observer in 1987.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER

The hire and the fury: Nikole Hannah-Jones at UNC

Read all of The News & Observer’s coverage of the University of North Carolina’s decision to hire the Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist and the controversy that ensued.