NEW: The dean of Yale Law School authorized the email condemning second-year law student Trent Colbert for his use of the term "trap house." The revelation suggests she has been downplaying or deliberately obfuscating her involvement in the scandal.
The revelation comes amid a contentious review of Gerken's deanship. Gerken vowed in October not to "act on the basis of partial facts" and tasked Yale Law School deputy dean Ian Ayres with assembling a report on the incident.
In a follow-up email that appeared to summarize the report, Gerken said that the administration's message condemning Colbert was inappropriate and implied it had been sent without her permission.
"I have spent every year of my deanship trying to foster an inclusive community and create an environment where students feel called into the community rather than called out," Gerken wrote.
"The email message from administrators to members of the 2L class did not strike the appropriate balance between those two goals."
It is not clear if the report will be made public, or whether Gerken had any other involvement in the meetings between Colbert and the administration.
Faculty haven't been allowed to read the report for themselves; they've had to go to Ayres's office and ask for it to be read aloud to them.
The Yale administration has adopted such cloak-and-dagger protocols amid ongoing tensions between Yale faculty, who, in Lat's telling, have been debating the "trap house" incident in faculty-wide emails for weeks. davidlat.substack.com/p/as-the-yale-…
Monica Bell and other young professors have defended the administration's treatment of Colbert, while law school luminaries like Roberta Romano and Akhil Amar have derided it—with Amar calling on the administration to apologize for its "deplorable" conduct.freebeacon.com/campus/deplora…
Gerken is embroiled in a separate scandal after two students filed a lawsuit alleging the dean threatened to jeopardize their careers unless they made false statements about Amy Chua. freebeacon.com/campus/yale-la…
When the students refused, according to the suit, Gerken and associate dean Ellen Cosgrove took steps to have them blackballed from a prestigious fellowship.
To hear the media tell it, the emergence of the Omicron variant in South Africa is the direct result of "vaccine hoarding" by Western countries. As @DrewHolden360 and I explain in the Free Beacon, this narrative is mostly false.
@DrewHolden360 Five of the eight countries from which the Biden administration has suspended travel have pumped the brakes on new vaccine shipments because the countries have more doses than health officials can administer. That's a tragedy, but it's not due to vaccine hoarding.
Vaccine hesitancy is widespread across Africa. A recent survey that spans five West African countries found that 6 in 10 people were vaccine hesitant—compared with 13 percent or less in France, the United Kingdom, and other parts of Europe and 27 percent in the United States.
SCOOP: The two accrediting bodies for all US medical schools now say that meritocracy is "malignant" and that race has "no genetic or scientific basis"—positions many doctors worry will lower standards of care and endanger lives.
The Liaison Committee on Medical Education, which accredits all medical schools in North America, is cosponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Association for Medical Colleges (AAMC).
Those are the same groups that on Oct. 30 released a controversial guide to "advancing health equity" through "language, narrative, and concepts."
Yes, the same guide everyone was mocking on twitter the other week.
New research finds that 1/5th of academic jobs require DEI statements; that the statements are significantly more common at elite schools than non-elite ones; and that jobs in STEM are just as likely as jobs in the social sciences to require DEI statements.freebeacon.com/campus/study-d…
The last finding surprised James Paul, one of the study's co-authors. He'd hypothesized that the more empirical a field, the less likely it would be to use "soft" criteria when evaluating applicants. But when he actually ran the data, that hypothesis collapsed.
"The most surprising finding of the paper is that these requirements are not just limited to the softer humanities," Paul said. "I would have expected these statements to be less common in math and engineering, but they're not."
NEW: The YLS administrator at the center of Traphouse-gate pushed the Yale Law Journal to host a diversity trainer who said anti-Semitism is merely a form of anti-blackness and suggested the FBI artificially inflates the number of anti-Semitic hate crimes. bit.ly/3pZ5oXZ
The comments from diversity trainer Ericka Hart—a self-described "kinky" sex-ed teacher who works with children as young as nine—shocked members of the predominantly liberal law review, many of whom characterized the presentation as anti-Semitic.
"I consider myself very liberal," a student said. But Hart's presentation, delivered Sept. 17 to members of the law review, was "almost like a conservative parody of what antiracism trainings are like." Hart had been recommended to the Journal by YLS DEI director Yaseen Eldik.
BREAKING: Yale Law School's Office of Student Affairs has removed all administrator profiles from its website "to protect staff members" in the wake of widespread outrage about the school's treatment of Trent Colbert. freebeacon.com/campus/damage-…
Two of those administrators, Yale Law diversity director Yaseen Eldik and Associate Dean Ellen Cosgrove, suggested that Colbert could have trouble with the bar if he didn't apologize for his invitation.
That wasn't an empty threat: According to a now-deleted version of the student affairs website, Cosgrove's remit involves the bar exam's "character and fitness" investigations, which review aspiring lawyers' disciplinary records in considerable detail.
What do Martha Nussbaum, JD Vance, Nicholas Christakis, and Tom Cotton have in common? They're all outraged by Yale Law School's recent conduct—with Cotton going so far as to threaten Yale's federal funding.
Cotton told the Free Beacon that if Yale Law wants to "keep getting federal funds," it "should focus on teaching the law and protect the free speech of [its] students."
But it is the threat of losing federal funds that motivates censorship in the first place.
Though private schools like Yale are not bound by the 1A, they are bound by civil rights laws that forbid discrimination and harassment. That means they have an incentive to flout their own speech protections whenever a student registers offense, no matter how trivial it seems.