Sexual harassment is not your academic freedom

Recently, Professor Dylan Evans has launched a petition campaign to fight his two-year “close supervision” order which was issued in response to an incident where he approached a female colleague to discuss an academic paper on fellatio in fruit bats. She interpreted this as an unwelcome incident of sexual harassment and filed a formal complaint. As he has been telling the story, the HR department dismissed the complaint. Nonetheless, the president of the university placed him on “close supervision” for two years. Unfortunately, the details of this are solely coming from Dr. Evans, who has launched a petition and a youtube video of select documents and has even made up a twitter hashtag, all portraying this as an academic freedom issue. A full posting of the documents challenges his claim of academic freedom, however.

First, a this is not an issue that random people on the internet should be petitioning. There is quite obviously more going on to the story that a random person like myself doesn’t know about.

Second, Dr. Evans seems to be hiding behind the “but, it’s science” argument, ignoring the fact that science has interpretations that are socially relevant. Indeed, the study in question is meant to highlight that things we consider to be uniquely human are not necessarily so and the the very first line of the study mentions human oral sex. In any normal work environment, it would be considered sexual harassment to approach a colleague of the opposite sex and try to engage in a conversation about fellatio. Would the case have been as easily dismissed if Dr. Evans had presented the YouTube video of bat copulation instead? Heck, just check out the list of “similar videos” for that to see the kind of thing that people associate with bat fellatio. The scientific facts are the same in both the video and the paper, so both would be equally appropriate to show a colleague, right? Undoubtedly, there should be more room for such discussion in academic circles, but one should not be surprised that this act was interpreted as harassment.

Third, most discussion has said that the Prez reprimands him despite that HR did not consider the complaints to be sexual harassment. This seems inconsistent with due process, but I’m not going to sign the stupid petition (which is also inconsistent with due process) because there is likely much more going on and much more history to the reprimand than the immediate complaint. Indeed, a closer reading of the letters Dr. Evans has posted indicates that there were *two* formal complaints made against him, one upheld and one dismissed (regarding the bat paper) and that the disciplinary procedures the president instituted were consistent with this. The complaints were not only about the bat paper, but about repeated discussions of sexual topics, unwelcome compliments, and inappropriate touching. Apparently, Dr. Evans skipped these parts of the complaint on his Youtube video and petition.

Academia allows a lot of BS that other sectors don’t (nepotism, sexism) and allows way more discrimination than would be acceptable in industry or government. I could make a long list of TMI profs who would share inappropriate details about themselves… details which would have them kicked to the curb in an industry setting. It is particularly disconcerting that such discrimination and inappropriateness can be so easily twisted into an “academic freedom” issue, with parties claiming “anti-science.”

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  • http://www.demurelemur.wordpress.com Demure Lemur

    Great article. I’m amazed at how many people are signing the petition without thinking about the context in which Dr. Evans may have broached the subject of bat fellatio with his colleague. The account of the complaint made has been hugely oversimplified – the complainant had a lot more to say than ‘he talked about bat boners’. It’s outrageous that this sexual harrassment complaint has been framed as an academic freedom issue.

  • Areg

    Second, Dr. Evans seems to be hiding behind the “but, it’s science” argument, ignoring the fact that science has interpretations that are socially relevant.
    ————-
    Not in an academic setting. In academia science is science.

    In any normal work environment, it would be considered sexual harassment to approach a colleague of the opposite sex and try to engage in a conversation about fellatio.
    ————–
    I am pretty sure that medical researchers who work on the topic of human sexuality discuss fellatio all the time. Dr. Evan’s case isn’t that different. You really should abstain from making such categorical yet ignorant statements.

  • Justin

    Not in an academic setting. In academia science is science.

    Academia is a very specific social context. The “science” engaged herein is thoroughly a social endeavor and cannot be separated from the social context. The ideal of purely-objective-science does not exist… it is only an ideal. What people study is influenced by funding availability which is influence by politics and societal values. Similarly, how we go about studying it is affected by social decisions and conventions and ethics.

    I am pretty sure that medical researchers who work on the topic of human sexuality discuss fellatio all the time. Dr. Evan’s case isn’t that different. You really should abstain from making such categorical yet ignorant statements.

    No doubt, there are many professions which require very explicit conversation regarding topics of human sexuality which are largely considered taboo by society. My wife works at a rape crisis center and as part of her job engages in detailed, explicit, conversations with her clients and colleagues regarding acts of sexual assault. But her organization still has an HR department and sexual harassment policies. Obviously, I am ignorant of the specifics of this case which Dr. Evans has not (inappropriately) leaked. But simply having a job wherein you must engage in specific types of job-related conversations about fellatio doesn’t permit you to have any conversation about fellatio in any situation at work. For academics, there is a big difference between giving a presentation at a conference on sexual acts (something which is undoubtedly part of their professional obligation and is ought to be protected as academic freedom) and cornering a colleague alone in a dark hallway on a late night in order to tell them about the sexual act one just presented on at the conference (an example of sexual harassment and possibly intimidation/coercion that ought not be protected by academic freedom). Dr. Evans case is obviously at neither of these two extremes, but it is ignorant to argue that any and all discussions of sex that happen between faculty in a university setting are protected by academic freedom.