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Harvard FIREand Faculty Respond to Robin Steinberg Disinvitation

Last week, the that two Harvard Law School student groupsâthe Womenâs Law Association (WLA) and the Law and International Development Society (LIDS)âhad invited Bronx Defenders Executive Director Robin Steinberg to speak at the school, and that she would be honored in the schoolâs International Womenâs Day Exhibit. According to the Post, New York Police Department union leaders objected, citing and misleading statements relating to an anti-cop rap video that included appearances by Bronx Defenders employees and was filmed, in part, in the Bronx Defenders offices.
Mere hours after the Postâs article, the student groups . But now, other members of the Harvard Law community are to honor Steinberg and denouncing the student groups for quickly folding.
Those under pressure to disinvite a contentious speaker should know by now that caving to those demands wonât quell the controversy, and it certainly wonât change whatever ideas or behavior are being found objectionable. Instead, the disinvitation hinders or prevents the meaningful campus discussion that could have taken place if objectors presented their viewpoints for consideration in addition to, rather than instead of, those of the speaker. Besides, itâs all but certain that a speaker or honoree remarkable enough to receive an invitation in the first place wonât be universally liked. If colleges and students disinvited all visitors to whom someone objected, no speakers or honorees would ever make it to campus.
WLAâs and LIDSâs concession is worrying for another reason, too. The Post relayed a from the groups in which they clarify that they âdid not intend for [Steinbergâs] nomination to suggest in any way that it is acceptable to harm police officers or incite others to do so.â The harsher assessments of Steinbergâs misconduct characterize her as having and failed to take basic steps to monitor what was going on in her own office, but even critics seem to be stopping short of suggesting that Steinberg herself actually supports violence against police officers. The groupsâ disclaimer thus mirrors the logic Western Michigan University used to burden students who invited rapper and activist Boots Riley to campus last spring: Essentially, all behavior and advocacy of a group is also attributed to (and used against) anyone who can be associated with that group, even indirectly.
Thankfully, not everyone at Harvard has accepted this result.
More than 180 students, alumni, and staff published in two student publications that through her decades of work, Steinberg âhas improved the lives of countless women and individuals whose voices would otherwise be silenced,â making her an apt choice for recognition by the school and the student groups. They further criticized the groups for following the direction of those quoted in the media, rather than engaging with the Harvard community:
The decision to remove Robin Steinberg from the exhibit does not represent the feelings of the student body, and it was not made in a democratic or transparent way. In fact, the decision was made without meaningful dialogue or consultation with members of either organization or even the various students who contributed to the nominating process. This decision-making suggests that the leadership of the WLA and LIDS caved to the pressures exerted by a divisive, and often sexist, media campaign, as well as to pressures from our own administration, instead of staying true to the wishes of students who believed Ms. Steinberg worthy of recognition despite the recent events involving The Bronx Defenders.
The letter concluded with an invitation to Steinberg and a request of the WLA and LIDS:
The leaders of the WLA and LIDS do not speak for us. As such, we are extending our own invitation to Ms. Steinberg to speak at HLS. Our community has a lot to learn from her. We also expect these organizations to either meaningfully explain their decision or to apologize and include Robin Steinberg in the International Womenâs Day Exhibit.
If thatâs not enough to prompt a re-reconsideration, criminal defense attorney on his blog that Harvard Law professor (and, as weâve noted before on The Torch, due process advocate) Janet Halley made her thoughts on the subject clear thusly:
Harvard lawprof Janet Halley, who was also slated to be an honoree for International Womenâs Day, has rejected the award due to to the Womenâs Law Association withdrawing its invitation and award to Robin Steinberg.
Ouch.
Whether or not Steinberg is re-invited (weâve seen it happen before), itâs reassuring to see that not all members of the Harvard Law community will let themselves be cowed by critics. We are also glad to see that Steinberg has been extended a new invitation to speak on campus.
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