Call Me Back - with Dan Senor - How Vanderbilt University is getting it right - with Chancellor Diermeier
Episode Date: November 18, 2024Well before October 7th 2023, we were already witnessing too many examples of the worst in higher education with a lack of diversity of ideas and debate. Numerous U.S. college campuses had become inte...llectual and ideological monocultures. Then, immediately following October 7th, we saw something much darker, but perhaps we shouldn’t have been surprised. Many of us lament what is happening in higher education. But at CallMeBack, we have also observed some bright spots — universities with inspiring leaders and healthy intellectual climates — and we want to try to understand what is happening at these universities that have bucked the trend. In this episode, we have a discussion about Vanderbilt University. Our guest is Daniel Diermeier, Vanderbilt University’s ninth chancellor. He previously served in leadership roles at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and at the University of Chicago, where he served as dean of the Harris School of Public Policy. In addition to his role as chancellor, Diermeier is University Distinguished Professor in the Owen Graduate School of Management and Distinguished University Professor of Political Science in the College of Arts & Science. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Guggenheim Foundation. He has published five books and more than 100 research articles in academic journals. In our conversation, which was recorded on campus, Chancellor Diermeier discusses how the university has developed its policies around free speech, institutional neutrality, and campus order. In the face of staggering levels of intolerance -- not to mention pro-Hamas protests effectively taking over some campuses -- has Vanderbilt become a model for how to get it right? The article referenced in this episode - Chancellor Diermeier’s piece in the Wall Street Journal, ‘Free speech Is Alive and Well at Vanderbilt University’ https://www.wsj.com/articles/free-speech-is-alive-and-well-at-vanderbilt-university-023884d1 Additional piece recommended, Chancellor Diermeier in the Wall Street Journal: ‘Scholarly Associations Aren’t Entitled to Their Opinions’ https://www.wsj.com/opinion/scholarly-associations-arent-entitled-to-their-opinions-it-chills-debate-harms-young-faculty-2584c09c?st=LK2G22&reflink=article_imessage_share
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Institutional authority means for us that we will not take a position on political or social issues as a university.
Our faculty and our students can. They're encouraged to do so.
But our point of view is that universities are platforms. They're there to encourage debate not to settle it.
I would say we have a commitment to civil discourse. We want to treat each other with respect.
There's a sense that we want to listen to each other.
We want to use arguments.
And that is an important part of who we live together and how we learn together and how we do research
together.
It's 10 a.m. on Thursday, November 14th here in Nashville, Tennessee, where I am at Vanderbilt
University. It is 11 a.m. on Thursday, November 14th here in Nashville, Tennessee, where I am at Vanderbilt University.
It is 11 a.m. on Thursday, November 14th in New York City. It is 6 o'clock p.m.
in Israel on November 14th as Israelis are winding down their day. And I'm
pleased to welcome to this podcast for the first time Daniel Diermeier, the
Chancellor of Vanderbilt University here on your campus, in your home, so to speak.
Thanks for joining me. Thanks for having me. It's good to be with you.
Well, welcome to Vanderbilt. I'm looking forward to the conversation.
Okay, great. There's a lot I want to cover. I guess first, a little bit about you.
The first is, can you just explain to our listeners, to our viewers, how you wound up here?
Happy to talk about it. So I was born in Berlin. was still divided moved to Munich was in Germany until I was 23
I'm a first-generation student
So actually the first of my family to graduate from high school
And so I got a fellowship from the German government that included a year in the United States
I went to the University of Southern California was a graduate student in philosophy
PhD program there that didn't that wasn't the right thing for me.
Went back to Germany when the wall fell,
then got my PhD in the US,
because I loved being in the United States,
wanted to go back, but basically switched fields.
And then my first job was at Stanford
in the business school.
I was at Northwestern for many years.
And then I was dean of the public policy school
at University of Chicago provost for four years years and then came to Vanderbilt.
Which is where you worked with Bob Zimmer.
Yes, I was a provost under Bob Zimmer for four years.
Right, who's sort of a giant in academia.
And then a minute, just a little bit about Vanderbilt.
Obviously, rigorously high academic standards,
but what I'm most struck about Vanderbilt
is when I speak to students at Vanderbilt
or graduates of Vanderbilt or their families, there's a sense of students who are stimulated
and happy. So stimulated intellectually and academically but generally upbeat.
It's not a superficial observation I hope because at this moment where we are
with higher education, when I talk to students at many campuses and I talk to
students a lot of campuses, I speak to a lot of campuses, there's a sense of heaviness.
In some cases, there's a sense of menacing heaviness
for what a lot of students are going through.
And I talk to students at Vanderbilt,
they're like, the sky is blue.
And I have a feeling that has something to do,
but probably more to do than the fact
that the Commodores, the football team's record
is six and four.
They shocked and beat Alabama. We can talk a little about that. That was quite a
spectacle. But what's going on here that you think is contributing to that
upbeatness? So I would say we are in a phenomenal spot right now. Probably like
a month ago, we had the best week in the university's history. One of our
faculty members was recognized with the MacArthur Genius Award.
We had one of our alums won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
We beat Alabama, which was great.
So our listeners should focus on this just for one moment
because for sports fans like me,
one of my sons who's obsessed with college football,
he follows LSU, he follows, he's like,
Dad, Vanderbilt beat Alabama.
And then he's showing me the images
of the storming the field and taking the goalpost.
And it was quite something.
I mean, we have not beat Alabama, of course,
is the giant college athletics for many years.
And we had not beaten them in 40 years.
We had never beaten a top five team in our history.
And they were ranked top one, number one.
And they were there.
And so the students ran down on the field
that took down the goalpost. they carried that very heavy piece of hardware through
downtown it was two and a half miles without any property damage then they
threw it into the river created a short-term shipping hazard so we pulled
it back out and people were just ecstatic I mean it was a wonderful
moment for everybody to come together and I think that's something college
athletics really can do yeah it can bring a community together.
Right. So you had this amazing week last week.
The last thing I should say, one of our faculty members was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Jeff Coffin, he is the saxophonist of the Dave Matthews Band,
an Arrangia composer, really an incredible faculty member.
And what that was an expression, I think, a manifestation, I think, who we are as a university. So the way we think about this is
we want every member of our community
to realize their full potential.
And for the students, that means academically and as people.
So we strongly believe in an educational model that
helps you grow as a full person.
Our residential college model is based around that.
It's a little bit kind of IQ plus EQ and we really focus on that.
So that means that we want our students to thrive and we believe and that's the second pillar that
students
really develop best, really every member of our community develops best if they're a member of a community that's supportive and challenging.
So when you see around the students are happy, they work hard and the classes are challenging, but they're part of a
community that is supportive. So if you put all of that together, academically
rigorous, kind of a happy campus culture, Nashville is a great place to be, and
then you add to that athletics now, you know, being a newly formed
college football powerhouse, it creates an environment for students that they love
and it's very attractive.
All right, so I wanna talk about some of the issues
you've addressed over the last couple years.
You wrote an op-ed for the Wall Street Journal last April
about free speech and the role that free speech plays
on campus, and before we get into that particular piece,
has this been a long-standing priority for you
that predated this past year?
Oh yeah, absolutely, and it started certainly during my time at the University of Chicago,
which always has been kind of a bastion of free speech. And the way we think about this
as Vanderbilt is we want to be very clear about our values. And the values are best
thought about as three pillars. Pillar one is free expression. So that is very similar
to the Chicago principles, open forums,
the broadest freedom for students and our faculty
to discuss ideas from a whole variety of different areas
and to take these ideas where they lead them.
The second piece is what we call institutional neutrality.
Institutional neutrality means for us
that we will not take a position on political or social issues
as a university.
Our faculty and our
students can. They're encouraged to do so. But our point of view is that universities
are platforms. They're there to encourage debate, not to settle it. And the third one,
which is particularly typical of the Vanderbilt culture, less typical of University of Chicago,
I would say we have a commitment to civil discourse. And what that means is that we
want to remember the members of one community. We want to treat each other with respect. we have a commitment to civil discourse.
And what that means is that we want to remember the members of one community, we want to treat each other with respect.
There's a sense that we want to listen to each other, we want to use arguments, we want to use fact-based points of view.
And that is an important part of who we live together and how we learn together and how we do research together.
So when our students arrive on campus or freshmen, they assign a community
creed where they reaffirm those values. So we talk about it all the time. It's an important
part of who we are. And then there's a lot of programming around that. We call it dialogue
Vanderbilt. There are small group interactions. There are lots of ways to engage with each
other in the residential colleges. There are speaker series. There's a very intentional way to make sure
that everybody gets that and knows how to do it.
Because one thing that we've noticed
is that students are not necessarily prepared
from their high schools.
It's a big problem actually.
They're not just unprepared, it's the opposite.
That is true.
Right.
So that's an important part for us
so that they know that this is who we are
and they can fully participate in that.
And just one example, last August when we had a new generation or new group of students coming
to campus, I spent an hour and a half with them, with the freshmen and kind of edited in two groups
where I talked about that we had a conversation with the students, we went to some challenging
cases, so everybody knew that I care about it, that the university cares about it, and that is who we are.
Our goal right now is to just make this totally part of the culture of the university in terms of undergrads,
graduate students, faculty, and we made a humongous amount of progress.
And I think that's what you pick up when you're on campus.
So for years, a number of organizations have been sounding the alarm about the lack of free expression on campuses or
the constraints on true free expression on campuses like the Foundation for
Individual Rights and Expression Fire but other groups too have been sounding
the alarm. What do you think the greatest threats are to free expression on
college campuses today in the US? The problems or the challenges to free
expression really go back almost a decade now and we've seen this in a whole variety of universities.
The biggest challenge really is that you need to have a culture and a commitment to free
expression.
And that many, particularly members of the student body, but also some faculty, and then
there's a broader political environment, are basically trying to put constraints on that.
It is very often motivated by people having a particularly very strong
point of view on a particular controversial issue. One of my faculty members has a wonderful term
for that. She called it the rush to righteousness. It's that people figure out right away this is
the right answer. I don't have to engage anymore because I figured it out and then it becomes kind
of a moral question because I got it, you don't have it and now it becomes kind of an arm wrestling match.
And that has led to disruptions, it led to kind of shouting down of speakers.
I mean there are many, many examples of that.
And it's very, very important that these threats to free expression and free speech on campus
are recognized and then we need to have a clear point of view and
policies that support that. So just want to give you one example of that. You heard
already about what we're doing in terms of development for the students and so
that they understand that is an education component but you also need to
have policies and processes in place. So on the free speech side, you know, one of
the challenges are outside speakers, controversial speakers and I have to
question myself, how do you do that?
And so we have a lot of people on campus.
We had Mitch McConnell last week,
and two weeks earlier we had Nancy Pelosi.
We had Michael Knowles last year.
We have Ben Shapiro coming next week.
I mean, these are people that usually create
some kind of controversy on campus.
But our point of view is any registered student organization
and any faculty member can bring to campus
whoever they want.
They just need to coordinate with us on where and when and so forth.
That has been our tradition since the 60s.
We go back to the 60s on that.
So in the 60s we had student-led event called the Impact Symposium at the time at the time
Strom Thurman and Stokely Carmichael on campus, which was at the time of course created a
lot of controversy.
So that's how we do it.
And of course then you have somebody on campus that creates these challenges,
and then immediately you got outrage.
But you have to ask yourself, how do you do it?
So that's our model.
Our students have the freedom to do this.
Model two, you have no outside speakers.
Even in a classroom setting, people get upset by this or the other.
That's not good.
Or you have a committee where everybody has to be vetted
and you can imagine what that looks like.
So I think it's important that we always understand
how do we operationalize and then how does it tie back
to our values and then act accordingly.
Institutional neutrality, which you alluded to earlier,
and what's your case to other universities
as to why institutional neutrality is the only way to go,
especially in the environment
we're in today.
Yeah, so institutional neutrality is a concept that many universities struggle with.
And until very recently, it was really among the major universities, was the University
of Chicago, us, and University of North Carolina that had a commitment to it.
What we've seen now over the summer and early fall, there's a
whole list of universities that have now made some type of commitment to institutional neutrality.
Harvard, Johns Hopkins, Stanford, Penn, a whole variety of them. So the concept basically,
we had it at Vanderbilt again to the late 60s, early 70s. Chicago had it also it was codified in the late 60s 1967 in the Calvin Report
and what the Calvin Report fundamentally says is on issues that are core to the
university its mission of generating and transmitting knowledge path-bating
research transformative education universities have values and have a
purpose on those types of things, there should be advocates, there should be forceful, for example,
protection of free speech.
On other issues that are outside of that scope, for example, foreign policy, universities
should be silent.
They should not have a position whatsoever.
Why?
Because you want to have the broadest freedom for faculty and students to engage with these
issues without having to worry about a party line. want to have the broadest freedom for faculty and students to engage with these issues
without having to worry about a party line.
So the classic argument for institutional neutrality is what's called the chilling effect.
So if there's an official party line, faculty and students are less likely to engage with
a particular topic.
So if we're taking a position on Israel or pro-Palestinian position, we are chilling
the type of debate and discussions
that can go on.
That's the first argument.
The second argument,
which I don't think is fully appreciated,
is that if you are not committed to institutional neutrality
and if you have chosen to take positions
on this or that or the other,
you are encouraging politicization on campus.
Because now there's something at stake for various groups
to lobby you, to pressure you, and it just creates this ongoing drama. And I think one of the
things that we've seen on campus recently was really that. The third thing
I think, the third reason is it undermines our reverence, our commitment to
expertise. If I over the weekend make a statement condemning the Supreme Court
over the Dorps decision, I have faculty members who spent their entire life on the constitutionality of Roe v. Wade that really understand the
subtleties, understand maybe the public policy or public health context, or they're coming
about it from a kind of ethical or religious point of view. And so that's their career.
That's the expertise. That's what we value. And the idea that I can do this over the weekend
and just say, well, that's the right answer is preposterous.
So universities need to be committed to that.
I think that is clearly follows from their mission.
However, what we're seeing now, and I think that's really a consequence of what happened
after October 7th on campuses, universities are moving in that direction, but not all
the way.
So let me take you as an example as Harvard.
So Harvard had a faculty report now,
and I've written about this too in the Wall Street Journal,
where they said, OK, the president will no longer take,
will refrain from taking positions.
But the real issue in many cases is not
only about position taking with speaking,
but about what you do.
So of course, the demands from many
of the pro-Palestinian groups was to divest from companies related to Israel.
That's not just about speech, that's about action. That's about how do you think about your endowment,
how do you think about your vendor relationships, how do you think about what you do academically as well.
So it's very important that universities don't just stop in terms of speeches,
but they go all the way so that everything
that they do is consistent with their mission and with institutional neutrality.
Don't use the endowment for political purposes.
Don't select vendors on whether they have a particular political orientation.
And then crucially, it needs not only to be at the level of the president and provost,
the university level, but it needs to apply to departments, schools, and so forth.
Always driven by the same values.
No chilling effect, have broad variety of points of view on campus, and create a platform
for where they can thrive.
In the state of Tennessee, it's state law that you can't cooperate with a BDS campaign
or BDS effort.
So can you just spend a minute explaining that?
Because that's just a reality that I think you probably turn to your faculty or students, whoever, and say, A, it's not our policy,
and B, it's actually illegal. Yes, this was an important subtlety or complication in the case.
So the state of Tennessee, as a variety of other states in the United States, have restrictions of
participating in boycotts against allies of the United States. That's the way it's framed. Now, that is if you're in violation of the state law,
research support from the state, which is important for us,
particularly in areas of education, transportation,
and so forth, it would be at risk.
And you have to affirm that every year.
So it's not that there's an investigation.
You have to actually affirm that they need not
engaging in that, and to be eligible for state funding.
So the issue was that our student government wanted to vote
on a resolution that would allow them
to use their funding only
for companies that did not have a TIDAL as well. So basically utilize their
funds towards participating in a boycott against companies with TIDAL as well.
And that's an issue in a boycott against companies with Tysterozoa.
And that's an issue in a variety of different universities.
So we said, no, we can't have that.
And we're not allowing a vote either, because the funds that are utilized, they're university
funds, they're assigned to the students to use for the purposes of student government,
but they're university funds.
So what you do with your own money, that's your business, but university funds cannot be used for this purpose,
and therefore, we're not gonna do it.
And that's consistent with state law.
That was our interpretation of state law,
and we did a very careful analysis of that,
because the state doesn't distinguish
between the student government for the state,
these are our funds, and the student governments
are part of the university.
Hence, we would be in violation of state law.
So the corollary to that is I am very sensitive to what I've seen on campuses, which is just
lack of viewpoint diversity, the suppression. I'm not saying the ideas on campuses should
all be right of center. It's the last thing I want students to be exposed to. I want them
to be exposed to a diversity of views, which can only ultimately come from instructors
on the campus who have a range of views.
And I feel like more and more universities are waking up to this being a real problem.
The sort of the monoculture is of ideology, of political philosophy, of geopolitical outlook
is unhealthy for the campus environment for a number of the reasons you're saying.
So then their approach is we're going gonna kind of do affirmative action for conservatives.
So we're gonna have like a box checking exercise
to hire conservative instructors,
so we can say that our students have exposure.
So then you get classes like,
a friend of mine's daughter, Tufts,
I'm not picking on Tufts, it's just in my mind.
They literally had a class on conservative ideas
or conservative politics, meaning like,
to understand the conservative movement,
take this class as though it were like a foreign thing. So
how do you deal with the viewpoint diversity? Because the end of the day
it's about the diversity of the instructors, the professors on campus, and
again not treating it like oh we're just gonna hire a couple and we'll be done.
This is an important and complicated question. So the first thing that I would
say is the job, the responsibility of our
faculty members is not to use the classroom for political propaganda or for political
advocacy. That is not what they're supposed to do. And it's very important that this is
perfectly fine with the way we think about academic freedom. That is a long-standing
tradition. That's particularly true if it has absolutely nothing to do with the subject matter.
So the number one goal of the faculty is to create an environment that is educational.
And if that is not happening and we're drifting into other areas, we have a problem from the
point of view of professionalism, of what it means to be an educator.
So that's number one.
The second comment is, it's true that when you look at, you know, there's some empirical
studies on like kind of the political leanings of the faculty
There are most of them are on the left side of the political spectrum that I think is if you look at like things like campaign
Contribution and it varies a little bit, but it's overwhelmingly the case right now
Most of the things that we teach on campus, of course, there is no political content whatsoever in the classroom
I mean if you do a biochemistry class, it's just not relevant where you give your campaign contributions.
Where this becomes an issue, I would say, are the areas of the university where, if you will, society reflects upon itself.
So that is parts of the humanities, history, law schools, social sciences, political theory, those type of areas. It is absolutely essential that in this environment
the students understand the different point of views.
I mean, if you take a class on theories of justice,
you need to have different points of view on that.
It cannot be an intellectual monoculture. That is awful.
And so now the question is, how do you do that?
I think this whole kind of affirmative action, one side or the other is very problematic or like
how do you call it? The crime beat? Yeah, but we need to make sure that these positions are
authentically present and represented in the classroom. That's the key. Now that may be done
by faculty member who's a conservative who brings that point of view or by faculty member that
that are able to do in a whole variety of different ways. So the key to me is the outcome.
How do you make sure that these positions are, that get voiced in the classroom, that
the students are not afraid to take on these positions and explore them and investigate
them, and then the faculty member doesn't come in with a sense, well, that's kind of
weird or whatever, we have to talk about it anyway.
That's not good.
That is not a good educational experience.
So now exactly how do you do that?
I think it's complicated and varies from field to field.
I think in a law school, for example, there is really important that you have a representation,
a good representation of conservative legal scholars, because that's where a lot of the
action is, particularly when it comes to constitutional law.
So you need to have some of that.
In other areas it may be less important.
So it's really to me a question about how do we fulfill our purpose,
and then field by field what are the right strategies to get there.
Okay, so I want to look at this past year,
and basically last spring when campuses across the country
were dealing with these anti-Israel encampments that took over many campuses.
And there was a range of responses of universities, maybe on one end I would point to Dartmouth,
our mutual friend leads Dartmouth, where the leadership of Dartmouth really clamped down.
Then on the other end of the spectrum, a school you taught at, Northwestern, or worked at,
where they negotiated with the encampment and basically legitimized the encampment and the encampment community if you will as a
stakeholder that was to be dealt with and like reach enter into some kind of
like bilateral negotiation with. So where did Vanderbilt settle on that spectrum
and just any observations or lessons you can share from that time? So let me tell
you what happened and how we handled it and then I'll give you my interpretation of it and how it fits with the other universities.
So the first thing is these the values that I talked about, free expression, institutional neutrality, civil discourse, were clearly communicated to the campus community already in my inaugural speech.
But throughout my tenure, and we really did a lot of education programming around that. So it was clear to people what we stood for.
That's not to be underestimated.
After October 7th, our students did phenomenal.
We had vigils, we had conversations in the classroom, outside of the classroom.
I was extremely proud of how we've handled that, I would say, the first half year.
Then towards the end of the year, in December, we saw the emergence of a more radical pro-Palestinian student movement
What didn't surprise me? I was seeing this at, you know, multiple universities
It was you know, it was not a huge amount of students
But it was a pro-Palestinian position that you would see at many other campuses as well
So they were asking us to cut
relationships with vendors that had ties to Israel and divest from our investment, from our endowment. So a classic BDS type position. So in early January then when students
came back to campus, in my welcome back message I made it clear this is not consistent with
our values. So we are committed to institutional neutrality. You can talk about that. You can
have these debates. We can have protests and so forth, but they need to be respectful and we will not take a position on this, we will not divest from Israeli companies
or companies with ties to Israel the same as to four vendors.
That's our values, has been our values for a long time.
Second, a reminder that for people to engage in civil discourse.
And what then happened was the group kind of responded and said, we don't believe that, you know, institutional neutrality shouldn't apply here.
It's too important. And we also don't feel we're bound by civil discourse, which comes from an interesting, didn't quite know what that meant, even though they had signed it, you know, when they're joined on campus.
So what we then found out is in late March, what they meant by that. So they occupied the central building. They kind of under false pretenses,
you know, pretended that they had an appointment. Then they kind of they rushed into the building.
They pushed a security guard against the door frame. He was injured. They ran right kind of
pushed him aside and then tried to occupy my office, which was two levels or one level up.
Were you in the office?
No, I was not in the office. I came a little bit later.
They tried to push themselves and pushed one of my chief of staff.
They were prevented from doing that.
They closed the doors.
And then they basically sat in front of my office in the foyer, if you will.
So that was around nine o'clock in the morning.
It was absolutely clear that it was a violation of universities rules.
It was a form of trespassing.
And of course, we do not injure each other.
So there was no question about that this was a violation of university rules.
What we would do in such a case is then people go through the student disciplinary process.
So we told the students is that that's what's going to happen.
They would have to leave the building.
There was no food.
There was no bathroom access.
And around at 4 a.m., we were able in the evening, we were able to get a warrant from the municipality. We arrested three students
that had pushed a security guard in there. Everybody else was told that they need to
leave now. They can leave voluntarily, but they would be subject to student discipline,
which we had repeated throughout the day. So at that point, students left. We had the
students arrested. They are right now facing trial later this month on the charges of assault.
So that's that part.
We went through student discipline.
They were suspended immediately.
That takes about three to four weeks until the process is done.
So that's how we did it.
So our values were clear and then we enforced them.
And then what I did is that I decided that I would write a piece on that.
That was the op-ed in the Wall Street Journal,
you were mentioning.
Which we'll post in the show notes.
And I just explained what we were doing.
Those are the rules, those are the values,
and you have to be willing to stick with them.
So we were very clear that because we had a commitment
to institutional neutrality,
we would not use the endowment for political purposes.
So we're not gonna negotiate over that. That was clear, and we're not negotiating the endowment for political purposes. So we're not going to negotiate over that.
That was clear.
And we're not negotiating over our values.
But you had some professors, some members of the faculty,
who thought you went too far in expelling those students
and that they were ultimately overzealously expressing
their viewpoint, their right to free speech.
And it was one thing to rein it in,
it's another thing to expel them.
Yes.
And that you went too far.
Yes.
And your response to those professors is or was what?
Well, so we had a small group of professors, maybe 30 total,
that were sympathetic to the demands at the beginning.
You know, so we had that.
We had a letter that supported that.
After the occupation happened,
there was a letter with more signatures that basically said just like that we were too harsh and
that we should treat it differently and so forth. So the way we handle this is we have
a very, very robust, very well developed student discipline process. And I'm not part of that
process. So that is handled through our student affairs area, the Dean of Students. They have
people that follow the rules.
They always apply the same standards.
So if they're at a fight at a fraternity,
they go to student discipline.
And if they're okay, they're going to go to student
discipline.
So whatever violation of student conduct is handled by that.
They came back.
That was their finding.
And then we have an appeals process over the summer.
But it's a rigorous appeals process.
You have grounds for appeals and all the sanctions were upheld.
So there was that.
I'm not intervening with that.
There was the disciplinary process.
And then we had a discussion in the faculty senate on that where people had good questions,
I think appropriately appropriate.
We explained what happened.
That was kind of the end of it.
And the policy now on say encampments?
Yes.
So we had a small encampment, maybe like 10 tents or something in front of Kirkland Hall, and
we didn't have an encampment policy. So we didn't have a camping policy, if you will. It wasn't just about encampments,
we didn't have one. And so because it was not a policy violation,
we talked to the students and we basically said, okay, but you have to conduct yourselves appropriately.
You can't harass anybody, you can't occupy buildings, anything like that. And they did that. They had their encampment.
Everything was fine. And then when students leave campus right before graduation,
we told them now we have to pack up and they packed up. So that was that. We now,
you know, like many universities, we looked, you know, where were the gaps? How did we do this?
We have a commitment at Vandervoort. We always do an after-action review.
We always want to see what worked and what didn't work.
So we did that too.
And our sense was that even though the students behave just fine during this encampments,
encampments are problematic.
And they're problematic obviously when there's misconduct like harassment or people blocking
people from entrances.
That's one thing.
But encampments are problematic by themselves.
And the reason is that what we do whenever we have demonstrations on campus,
there is a we go through a process.
What they're about is to ensure that different groups have equal access to a space.
And there are symbolically important places on every campus.
So right before the occupation of Kirkland Hall, a week earlier,
we had on alumni lawn,
which is an important part on campus, a pro-Israeli, a pro-Palestinian group.
One had a wall with images of the hostages, the other of like, gauze and civilians being
killed.
They made their case.
Fine.
But when you occupy a space, you're denying the other group access, and we don't think
that's appropriate.
So it's physically disruptive.
You're saying, this is my space, and you don't have a right to it and that's
inappropriate given our commitment to free speech and neutrality. I take your
point about the protection of free speech so long as it doesn't disrupt
students ability to live their lives on campus and go about their academic
business but there are some expressions that you could imagine some statements
that are shocking.
At some campuses, for instance, you had protests, and obviously not this one, where they would
shout at Jewish students, go back to Europe, go back to Poland, or chant, singing, bomb
Tel Aviv, or there's a famous image from Columbia where there was a student saying, calling
out the Qassam Brigades, one of the military wings of Hamas, pointing to Jewish
students on campus and holding up a sign that said Qassam, your next target, like holding
up a sign saying basically kill those students.
Or they take the inverted red triangle, which is what Hamas uses to sort of identify its
next target.
And there were protesters on some campuses that were using the inverted red triangle
to put on images of Jewish students or at Jewish student events.
At some point, do you say that's not free expression?
It crosses the line because that's inflammatory to the point of incitement.
So the way we think about this is we are very broad.
If the context or the setting is appropriate and it's an event or anything like that, we
really are committed to open forums.
So I'll give you one example and I come back to your cases.
So I think it was like late October, early November,
we had Michael Knowles on campus,
was invited by the Young Americans for Freedom.
And the title of his talk, this was a year ago,
was In Praise of Settler Colonialism.
That was the title of the talk.
And then he said something very, which many students thought was very offensive to trans students, right, you know,
the first 10 minutes to kind of get things going. And, you know, there was a little like
shouting and stuff like that, but there was no disruption. And so a lot of our students
were very upset about that. So we had a discussion about, about how we think about speakers,
what they can say. As I said before, student groups can bring whoever they see fit on campus, even if they
are upsetting to other students.
And even if they say things that are not consistent, how we think about as members of the community.
That's our free speech component.
Where things get problematic is when those type of speeches constitute a sense of harassment,
intimidation, threats.
And the way we think about that is really, that's part of our regulatory environment
as an educational institution.
So we're subject to Title VI, which basically is our responsibility to make sure that our
students can participate fully in the educational experience without harassment, without discrimination. So when we have a case like that, what would happen is a member of the community would
file a complaint and then we'll review the complaint whether it constitutes harassment,
discrimination, threats, those type of things.
And that's investigated.
And then if there is a violation of equal opportunity, that's the legal framework, we
take appropriate action.
It may be whatever the specific aspect of the conduct was, but we look at one conduct
at a time.
And every member of our community, we want to make sure that they feel treated fairly,
but also that the complaints are treated appropriately.
So it becomes that process has worked very well.
We had a bunch of complaints last year that along those lines, they were handled appropriately.
And I think that's the way to do it.
Because I think you have to be very careful that on the one hand, you're consistent with
Title VI creating an environment where the students can thrive, while also making sure
that this whole idea of open forum is in place and is sustained.
Okay.
We were introduced by a mutual friend
who said you needed some help,
you were taking a trip to Israel.
This is in the summer of 23.
I was with you at a conference soon after that in Europe,
but you had already gone to Israel in the summer of 23,
and I think it was with a Vanderbilt group or team
or Vanderbilt delegation.
And I was struck by what the focus was of the trip. Yeah. Because
you described the goal which I was going to help with which was Israel as a model
of an ecosystem that was relevant to Vanderbilt specifically and I guess
Nashville more generally. So can you talk a little bit about why Israel was
important in that context and what you learned from it? Yes. So we are very
actively engaged in thinking through and working with the mayor's office and the community about
Enhancing Nashville's innovation economy. That's really important for us. There's a lot of dynamics on that universities play an important role
So what we did is we went to both the United States and then to Europe and then Israel
To look at different innovation ecosystems and what we and what we wanted to understand and what makes them work.
And of course I had read Startup Nation,
so that was very influential
and I thought it was very insightful
and I think that's how we got connected originally.
And we learned a lot.
And we learned a lot, we went to different places,
we went to Barcelona, we went to London
to see what they're doing and I wanted to go to Tel Aviv.
And I had heard in part motivated by reading your book the how successful
Tel Aviv and Israel overall as an ecosystem was and I was very impressed by what they what was happening there the lessons that I learned
Which was this those lessons were informed by all these conversations that how crucial the collaboration with Dean
Universities and the community is that you need to permeability, that there is something also about being a
destination so that this is a place comes back to original conversation, is that it's
a place where people want to be, that there are restaurants, that there's cultural life.
And that was important, which Nashville, of course, has.
And then the third piece, which I learned more about, is like the role of the government.
And that is something I think where the Israeli government played a very important role in
de-risking that for outside investors.
And so we learned a lot.
We had lots of conversations there.
We had conversations all across Europe, but that was the last stop on our trip.
And we're sitting there and understanding about what makes the various different components
work.
Of course, now it's a different world with different challenges. It was something
where I think we could really see how particular Tel Aviv but the Israeli
innovation economy works. But the most important thing for us is what our
values, why do we have the values and how to enforce them. And one thing that I
should say on that, the student disciplinary process is a really
important component to that. I think that, the student disciplinary process is a really important component
to that.
I think that what we see now, which is somewhat distressing,
is that at some universities, even those students kind
of engaged in breaking into buildings, threatening people,
there's no disciplinary consequences.
So the important thing is an announcement or statement
of principles is great, but now you need to operationalize it.
So you need to have clear policies about who can invite speakers, how that's done to make sure that
various groups have to have access, fair access to spaces, and then if there are rule violations,
what's your disciplinary process. So all these things need to work together. And then the most
important thing is that we constantly talk about it and it becomes
part of what we do every day. So the day before the election, we had a debate between the college Democrats and the college Republicans on campus, which is not possible at most campuses right now.
So with the president of the college Democrats, president of the college Republicans had a debate
format structured, moderated by another student. We had about 150 students in the audience.
The topics were immigration, abortion, and the size of the federal bureaucracy.
Everything was done civil.
They had their positions.
They argued for it.
It was a proud moment for us.
This is what we want to do, but it's the consequence of working at it.
Can't be done by decree.
You have to work on it.
It has to be cleared off to the values.
Then you have to have programming in place so that everybody
understands this is who we are because it's connected to our core value and
because that's what we believe is an essential component of a transformative
education. Yeah and the issues by the way that were selected are not like the size
of federal bureaucracy can be a little more analytical but the issue of abortion
and immigration these are emotional issues. Absolutely.
And that is an important part of an education, is that you will feel strongly about it.
You may feel emotional about it, but you now need to remember that you're members of one
community and you treat each other with respect.
Another reminder that this place, I think, is increasingly a model for what many of us
should hope for in terms of the direction of higher education in this country. So Daniel, thank you for your time, for your thoughtfulness,
for your sanity, because so much in higher education these days seem insane.
So Chancellor Diermar, thank you for hosting me and thank you for taking the
time for this conversation. Well thank you for having me on the podcast. Really
enjoyed the conversation. Thank you.
enjoyed the conversation. Thank you.
That's our show for today. Call Me Back is produced and edited by Alain Benatar, our media manager is Rebecca Strom, researched by Gabe Silverstein,
additional editing by Martin Huérgaux. Until next time, I'm your host, Dan
Sinor.