After Throwing a Tantrum, Nikole Hannah-Jones Receives Tenure at UNC

  • oeb11
  • 07-05-2021, 09:29 AM
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/carson...enure-n2591908



Source: Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, File


After months of contentious debate, New York Times reporter and “1619 Project” author Nikole Hannah-Jones is now a tenured journalism professor at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill.
In a special meeting last Wednesday, the UNC Board of Trustees voted 9-4 to approve Hannah-Jones’ tenure application. Her tenure at the Hussman School of Journalism and Media became official the following day.
UNC originally announced back in April that Hannah-Jones would serve as the Hussman School’s Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism. Though the position typically comes with tenure, the university instead offered Hannah-Jones a five-year contract, citing backlash from various conservative groups.
She refused and threatened to sue for racial discrimination. Pro-Hannah-Jones protests erupted at UNC in May, and 40 journalism faculty members signed a statement calling the decision to deny her tenure a “failure.”
While the university moved slowly to minimize the controversy, Hannah-Jones said through her lawyers last week that she would not accept any offer without tenure. Fearing more controversy, the Board of Trustees felt compelled to act.
“In (approving Hannah-Jones’ tenure), this board reaffirms that the university puts its highest values first," Trustee Gene Davis said after voting in favor of the motion.
Protesters attending the meeting laughed.
The “1619 Project” is The New York Times’ ongoing effort — started by Hannah-Jones in 2019 — to place slavery as the foundation and center of American history. It asserts that the colonists fought the American Revolution not for their independence from British tyranny, but for the right to keep their own slaves.
History shows that this is ludicrous, as the British also kept slaves until 1833 — 57 years after the colonists signed the Declaration of Independence. As such, the “1619 Project” has been criticized across the political spectrum. In December 2019, five historians penned a letter to The New York Times requesting that corrections be made.




Walter Hussman, the CEO of WEHCO Media and namesake of UNC’s journalism school, told The Daily Tar Heel last month that he was concerned about Hannah-Jones’ ideology and the “1619 Project” overshadowing his “core values.”
“I don't think the public wants journalists to tell them what they should think about,” Hussman said. "I think they want to get the facts and make that determination themselves.”
UNC’s journalism school was named for Hussman after he made a $25 million donation in 2019.












Looks like she ditched the red hair in her attempt to 'pass' and went black.

she, cori bush, and Louis farrakhan make a great Trio of hate spewing racists.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
not surprised that UNC caved once she screamed racial discrimination lawsuit.


its obvious they did not want to give her tenure. so they tossed principal over rubbish when they gave the 1619 author tenure.
Cori Bush, and Louis Farrakhan have created more racist than the KKK
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
what a cunt. let her go to Howard. they'll love her racist bullshit there..



Hannah-Jones chooses Howard after N. Carolina tenure fight

https://www.yahoo.com/news/nikole-ha...122249992.html


WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — A Black investigative journalist who won a Pulitzer Prize for her ground-breaking work on the bitter legacy of slavery in the U.S. announced Tuesday that she will not join the faculty at the University of North Carolina following an extended tenure fight, and instead will accept a chaired professorship at Howard University.


The dispute over whether North Carolina’s flagship public university would grant Nikole Hannah-Jones a lifetime faculty appointment has prompted weeks of outcry from within and beyond its Chapel Hill campus. Numerous professors and alumni voiced frustration, and Black students and faculty questioned during protests whether the predominantly white university values them.


“These last few weeks have been very dark. To be treated so shabbily by my alma mater, by a university that has given me so much and which I only sought to give back to, has been deeply painful,” Hannah-Jones said in a written statement.


Hannah-Jones — who won the Pulitzer Prize for her work on The New York Times Magazine’s 1619 Project focusing on America’s history of slavery — said Tuesday that her tenure application had stalled after political interference by conservatives and objections by a top donor at the journalism school. She lamented the “political firestorm that has dogged me since The 1619 Project published,” with conservatives including former President Donald Trump criticizing the work.


Hannah-Jones will instead accept a tenured position as the Knight Chair in Race and Investigative Journalism at Howard, a historically Black university in Washington, D.C., which also announced Tuesday that it had recruited award-winning journalist and author Ta-Nehisi Coates to join its faculty.


Coates won a National Book Award for “Between the World and Me,” which explores violence against Black people and white supremacy in America. Both have been given MacArthur “genius” grants for their writings.


Hannah Jones’ tenure application at UNC’s journalism school was submitted to the school’s trustees last year, but it was halted after a board member who vets the appointments raised questions about her nonacademic background, university officials have said. Instead, she was initially offered a five-year contract. Then last week, amid mounting pressure, the trustee board finally took up her submission and voted to offer her tenure.


“To be denied it (tenure) to only have that vote occur on the last possible day, at the last possible moment, after threat of legal action, after weeks of protest, after it became a national scandal, it’s just not something that I want anymore," Hannah-Jones said on “CBS This Morning,” which first broke the news of her decision.


Officials at UNC didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment. Its enrollment is approximately 60% white and 8% Black, according to university data.


Hannah-Jones and Coates’ Howard appointments are being supported by nearly $20 million donated by the Knight Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Ford Foundation, as well as by an anonymous donor, to support Howard’s continued education of and investment in Black journalists, the university said.


“It is my pleasure to welcome to Howard two of today’s most respected and influential journalists,” Howard President Wayne A. I. Frederick said in a news release. “At such a critical time for race relations in our country, it is vital that we understand the role of journalism in steering our national conversation and social progress.”


Coates celebrated his return to Howard, which is his alma mater.


“I heard a wise man once say, ‘A man who hates home will never be happy.’ And it is in the pursuit of wisdom and happiness that I return to join the esteemed faculty of Howard University. This is the faculty that molded me. This is the faculty that strengthened me,” Coates said. “Personally, I know of no higher personal honor than this.”


UNC had announced in April that Hannah-Jones, who received a master's degree from the university, would be joining the journalism school as a Knight Chair. It was later revealed that she had been given a contract position, despite the fact that her predecessors were granted tenure when appointed.


On Tuesday, Hannah-Jones cited political interference and the influence of a powerful donor to the journalism school, a reference to Arkansas newspaper publisher Walter Hussman, who has acknowledged in past interviews that he had emailed university leaders challenging her work as “highly contentious and highly controversial” before the process was halted.


Hussman, whose name adorns the UNC journalism school after he pledged a $25 million donation, said in a phone interview Tuesday that he respected Hannah-Jones’ decision but that he still has concerns about The 1619 Project.


“I really felt a sense of regret that we were never able to get together and never had a chance to sit down and talk to her,” he said.


In explaining her decision, Hannah-Jones said: “I cannot imagine working at and advancing a school named for a man who lobbied against me, who used his wealth to influence the hires and ideology of the journalism school, who ignored my 20 years of journalism experience, all of my credentials, all of my work, because he believed that a project that centered Black Americans equaled the denigration of white Americans.”


“Nor can I work at an institution whose leadership permitted this conduct and has done nothing to disavow it," she said.
the board of regents is racist

there can be no other reason

don't you even dare to look at my hatred and ideology masquerading as scholarship
  • oeb11
  • 07-06-2021, 01:34 PM
NGIT - well put , good Sir!
Unique_Carpenter's Avatar
But she walks and takes a job elsewhere.
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
But she walks and takes a job elsewhere. Originally Posted by Unique_Carpenter

exactly. first she pulls an Al Sharpton shakedown then decides she "doesn't fit in with UNC racists" and goes back to her krewe at Howard.
Unique_Carpenter's Avatar
Yup
And just so you guys know where I'm coming from, if you take a position, you follow through. Regardless of racism, theology (religous) differences, philosophy differences, or even sexual equality issues, etc.

This from a guy who no longer guest lectures, or subs for professors, at a local college seminary. The only item above that I didn't upset a couple deans about was philosophy.
Them: we don't talk about that in class
Me: the kids want to talk about that stuff.
Btw, the primary complaint was from male students in a Old testament history class. The gals wanted to discuss current 21st century objectification of females in Song of Solomon whereas the orginal author intent was worship, so why is that bent from original intent.
dilbert firestorm's Avatar
is she still going to file racial discrimination suit against UNC?


shes a piece of work; racist bitch.


instead of an upgrade offered by UNC, she got a downgrade at Howard.
The_Waco_Kid's Avatar
is she still going to file racial discrimination suit against UNC?


shes a piece of work; racist bitch.


instead of an upgrade offered by UNC, she got a downgrade at Howard. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
she's going to file suit against herself for being stupid, ugly, racist and a cunt

and blame it on Donald Trump


BAHHAHAAAAAAA