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Indybay Feature

Tenure Granted!

by Ignacio Chapela
I am proud to contact you with extraordinary news. Yesterday afternoon,
the Dean of the College of Natural Resources at Berkeley communicated to
me the intention of our new Chancellor to grant tenure to my position at
Berkeley.

This decision is a clear message of vindication not only of myself, but
also of the innumerable individual and collective efforts put into this
process by all of you. You have generously added your voices to the many
questions raised around my tenure review and demanded a process free of
conflict of interest or undue influence, and for this I am thankful. I
foresee no official recognition of your presence, but you should know that
it was precisely that which in the end achieved this result.
Berkeley. Wednesday, 18 May 2005.

Dear friends, dear colleagues,

I. An announcement

I am proud to contact you with extraordinary news. Yesterday afternoon,
the Dean of the College of Natural Resources at Berkeley communicated to
me the intention of our new Chancellor to grant tenure to my position at
Berkeley.

This decision is a clear message of vindication not only of myself, but
also of the innumerable individual and collective efforts put into this
process by all of you. You have generously added your voices to the many
questions raised around my tenure review and demanded a process free of
conflict of interest or undue influence, and for this I am thankful. I
foresee no official recognition of your presence, but you should know that
it was precisely that which in the end achieved this result.

As happened two years ago, when I received an important communication once
I had decided to bring my office out into the street in front of
California Hall, the tenure decision reached me while in the midst of
another street intervention seeking to cast public light upon the newest
incarnation of the bioengineering edifice. A small number of us have been
using our bicycles all week to circulate messages about the hull of the
bioengineering building on the Berkeley campus, which will soon reach
completion (see http://www.pulseofscience.org).

The cycling has been difficult at times, not least because of highly
unseasonable rain in Berkeley, but this has not stopped us from continuing
to be present, in the measure that we can, to represent our positions in
the face of the biotech dream. We will continue with this event, now in
the light of the news about my tenure. Please come to celebrate and
maintain the questioning with us.

II. An invitation

I want to extend my invitation again to any and all who might wish to join
us on the last day of our week-long event in Berkeley (see
http://www.pulseofscience.org).

On Friday evening (9-10:30 pm), the week’s events will culminate in a
gathering outside the bioengineering construction site:

Gray Brechin, brilliant analyst of California’s, the nation’s and the
world’s environment will share his deep knowledge of the history inscribed
in the buildings, stones and peopled spaces in our midst. Gray is author
of “Imperial San Francisco: Urban Power, Earthly Ruin”, and “Farewell,
Promised Land: Waking from the California Dream”. He is working on a new
project which explores the forgotten public endowment of the New Deal to
our country’s landscapes.


We will also hear from Dan Siegel, the attorney representing my case, but
also a veteran student activist and tireless challenger of the
university’s history of exclusionary practices.

The interventions will be concerted by Iain Boal, hub and spark of
intellectual life in the Bay Area and the world, historian of technics,
and, most recently, coauthor of Retort’s “Afflicted Powers: Capital and
Spectacle in a New Age of War”. Iain will share his historical
perspective on the bioengineering edifice – in Berkeley and beyond.

I will also make some remarks regarding my situation and the current
condition of biology and biotechnology.

For more information, see http://www.pulseofscience.org, where you will
find maps and directions, or simply come. We stage the cycling from the
platform at the entrance to the Greek Theatre on Gayley Road, across from
the bioengineering building. The speeches, slides, and illumination will
take place just to the north, in the grassy amphitheatre. Bring blankets,
bring food, music, but please also bring light (flashlights, laser
pointers, LED lights, etc.).

For those who cannot come, please note that a live webcast is planned for
Friday at 9-10:30 p.m. Pacific Time (see details below).


III. Whither my biology

The tenure decision has come in a manner to be expected: during one of the
quietest weeks on campus. The significance and implications of this news
is only slowly seeping into my consciousness, since I find myself once
again in a state of exhaustion while performing in a physically strenuous
street intervention.

So it is that I will need some time fully to grasp the new situation, to
consider what this decision brings as options, and to restructure my
personal and professional life around them. Nevertheless, I must admit to
a deep concern that the rare privilege of a tenured position in such a
university as UC Berkeley may become a muzzle. I am very aware that
becoming a vested member in the club of the tenured could cause me to
measure my words and thoughts more carefully. I have seen it happen, as I
have also watched the glint in the eye of colleagues dim, as they fitted
themselves to the academic cloth. But I have also seen the sharpness
undulled in those few among our large number who have maintained a
critical and uncompromising engagement with the real, an engagement that
is the straw in the shoe reminding them of the privilege granted them
through tenure by the generosity of the public, and not by pomp and
ritual, nor by autocratic decision, nor by presumed birthright.

I know of no other case where the public’s role in the conferring of
tenure has been more evident. There is no doubt in my mind that I owe this
tenure to you, as well as to others beyond yourselves who, without
knowing, have been prodigal in support of a place to think and speak
freely. I trust that you, and those who will come in your wake, will help
me bear the burden of responsibility to public service that tenure in this
university entails. No doubt I will need your support now more than ever.

Tenure should not stop our questioning - yours and mine - any more than
rain has stopped our circulation of meaning around and about the
bioengineering edifice this week. Please come to any of the three
remaining cycling events, or to the gathering on Friday evening, to
celebrate.



IV. If you cannot come, but would like to witness Friday’s events

I have received a generous offer from a technically sophisticated group to
arrange for live streaming of the Friday proceedings. This will allow
anyone with an internet connection anywhere in the world to at least
listen and watch. For those of you interested, the details are below.

Yours,

Ignacio

Dreams of Reason

This event will be web-cast on Friday 20 May 2005. 8-10 pm, Pacific Time

Brought to you by Enemy Combatant Radio (http://www.enemycombatantradio.net).
Make sure to check this website for up to date info, including details .

64k mp3 (broadband)
Virginia: http://mirror.enemycombatantradio.net:8030/listen.pls
Amsterdam: http://radio.indymedia.org:8000/ecr-hi.mp3.m3u

16k mp3 (dial up)
Amsterdam: http://radio.indymedia.org:8000/ecr-lo.mp3.m3u

Vbr ogg
Amsterdam: http://radio.indymedia.org:8000/ecr.ogg.m3u
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Tenure;Welfare for the academic class
if not for tenure he would be in danger of having to work for a living.
For all the lip service that indybay gives on selling us that they care about the poor, they sure drop everything in a hot minute to go lobby for a professor. who by all accounts should be able to speak for himself.
by ...
I think he just did speak for himself.
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