Members of U.S. anthropological group reject Israel boycott resolution
Published June 7, 2016
(JTA) — Members of the American Anthropological Association narrowly defeated a resolution to boycott Israeli academic institutions.
The results of the six week electronic ballot were announced by the association on Tuesday.
Some 51 percent of the association’s eligible members voted, the largest turnout in its history, the association said in a statement.
In the final tally, 2,423 members opposed the resolution, and 2,384 voted to support it. The resolution called on the association to refrain from formal collaborations with Israeli academic institutions but did not ban relationships with individual scholars.
“The membership has spoken and we hear them,” Alisse Waterston, association president, said in a statement. “We appreciate this was a difficult vote on an important and contentious issue. I’m especially proud that our members participated in knowledgeable, thoughtful, respectful debate throughout the process, and that AAA offers a model for informed engagement on difficult subjects. Now is the time for us to come together as an association steadfastly committed to advancing scholarly knowledge, to finding solutions to human and social problems, to giving voice to the underserved and to serving as a guardian of human rights.”
The association’s statement said that its members “are generally in agreement that serious threats to academic freedom and human rights have been noted in Israel-Palestine as a result of Israeli government policies and practices, and that AAA should respond to these threats.”
In response, the association’s Executive Board announced that it has approved a set of actions that can be taken, including: Issuing a statement of censure of the Israeli government; issuing a letter to U.S. government officials to identify ways in which the association believes that U.S. policies contribute to Israeli policies that violate academic freedom and disenfranchise Palestinians; and approving ways to provide active resource support for Palestinian and Israeli academics as well as visiting scholars in the region.
In December 2014, the association rejected a similar motion on boycotting Israeli academic institutions.
Some 1,100 anthropologists signed a petition to boycott Israel in August 2014. In describing their reasons for signing, the Anthropologists for the Boycott of Israeli Academic Institutions cited “Israel’s ongoing, systematic, and widespread violations of Palestinian academic freedom and human rights.”
Both the American Studies Association and the Asian American Studies Association have approved similar motions.