Source:
Capital Times (Madison.com)The big chill? UW’s Cronon sees ‘intimidation’ in GOP records request
TODD FINKELMEYER | The Capital Times
Thursday, April 7, 2011 5:00 am
-snip-
In the span of 10 days last month, Cronon started a blog, penned an op-ed for the New York Times and let the world know his emails were the target of an open records request from the Republican Party of Wisconsin, a move roundly criticized as an attempt to intimidate a professor for offering his perspective on political issues. Media outlets from across the country followed the story, with commentators, bloggers and readers debating everything from academic freedom to political pettiness.
-snip-
Perhaps surprisingly, this academic heavyweight appears truly shaken by the developments. During an hour-long discussion at his home near campus, Cronon chooses his words carefully — occasionally choking up with emotion — while examining the events that have rattled his world. He’s trying to understand the response his recent writings have elicited and is deeply concerned about the “chilling effect” the open records request could have on academic freedom. He’s also wondering if it might be time to step away from a state and an institution that is dear to him.
“I think seriously about whether I can stay at this university,” says Cronon, 56, who spent most of his childhood in Madison and returned to town in 1992 after a decade as a faculty member at Yale University. “I’m not exaggerating. I really never had to worry about information requests or which email to use at a private university. I hate that I’m saying this, but that’s how I feel.”
The president-elect of the American Historical Association stresses he believes that open records requests are a “foundation of our democracy,” but he views the one targeted at his email account as a blatant case of “intellectual intimidation.”
-snip-
Read more:
http://host.madison.com/news/local/education/university/article_474631d2-6068-11e0-b25d-001cc4c002e0.html
I hope that open-records request won't drive Cronon away from the university.
I'll have more to say about this article later, but I do want to note in the OP that Ohio professor Richard Vedder, one of the academics quoted in the article as among those who "shrugged their shoulders at the tactic and questioned if it would truly dampen scholarly inquiry," has long been a favorite academic of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) and was awarded their Adam Smith Free Enterprise Award in 2008:
http://www.independent.org/aboutus/awards.aspSo he's the last academic you'd expect to hear suggesting there was anything wrong with the WI GOP prying into Cronon's emails two days after Cronon blogged about ALEC. The reporter seems unaware of Vedder's association with ALEC.