NYU Launches Its Center for the Study of Antisemitism

October 19, 2024

NYU’s Center for the Study of Antisemitism, announced last fall, presented its inaugural academic conference, “Four Critical Questions: Confronting Antisemitism in 2024 and Beyond,” on April 18 in the John A. Paulson Center’s African Grove Theatre. Calling for critical inquiry founded in precision, empathy, and courage, NYU President Linda G. Mills opened the day-long event by emphasizing NYU’s decision to harness its unique academic strength. “The creation of the Center for the Study of Antisemitism comes in part out of the renewed wave of Jewish hatred we have seen in the past several months. There is a clear need for knowledge and further study,” Mills said. The hearing was the latest to highlight the ongoing debate about how to weigh the protection of academic freedom with concerns about discrimination and student safety.

At a moment when antisemitism is on the rise, NYU faculty, graduate students, and scholars from other universities grappled with the historical origins and widespread impact of this particular form of hate, examined its connection to other forms of bigotry, and analyzed the resulting harm to American democracy and societies around the world.

NYU’s Center for the Study of Antisemitism, announced last fall, presented its inaugural academic conference, “Four Critical Questions: Confronting Antisemitism in 2024 and Beyond,” on April 18 in the John A. Paulson Center’s African Grove Theatre. With more than 120 in attendance—including university leadership, supporters, and community partners—the conference employed a multidisciplinary lens to examine the age-old hate and its role in our current global crisis.

Calling for critical inquiry founded in precision, empathy, and courage, NYU President Linda G. Mills opened the day-long event by emphasizing NYU’s decision to harness its unique academic strength.

“The creation of the Center for the Study of Antisemitism comes in part out of the renewed wave of Jewish hatred we have seen in the past several months. There is a clear need for knowledge and further study,” Mills said. “Today we have assembled several brilliant scholars from NYU and beyond to use the tools we at a university know best: systemic and scholarly review.”

The conference came the day after a second Congressional hearing on higher education’s handling of antisemitism and the challenges facing universities in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas. The hearing was the latest to highlight the ongoing debate about how to weigh the protection of academic freedom with concerns about discrimination and student safety.

The source of this news is from New York University

Popular in Research

1

1 day ago

New Cancer Cases Projected to Top 2 Million, Hit Record High in 2024

2

1 day ago

UBC experts on cold and extreme weather

3

2 days ago

World-leading scientists named Canada Excellence Research Chairs at UBC

4

2 days ago

Rumble In The Fox Den: Sean Hannity’s Newsom Vs. DeSantis Debate Proves A Wasted Opportunity

5

1 day ago

Students achieved good exam results during the pandemic

MSN

5 hours from now

MSN

5 hours from now

Print on demand business with Printseekers.com

Sep 6, 2022

Donald and Melania Trump 'sleep in separate rooms,' Stormy Daniels claims

5 hours from now

Justice Thomas Criticizes ‘Nastiness and the Lies’ He Faces (2)

5 hours from now

Justice Clarence Thomas decries Washington as ‘hideous’ and pushes back on ‘nastiness’ of critics

5 hours from now