The Non-Boycott of Israeli Science

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When the physicist Stephen Hawking cited the academic boycott as his reason  for canceling a trip to a conference in Israel last spring, an  op-ed in The Guardian argued that the famous  scientist’s public stand “hits Israel where it hurts: science.”

“[W]hat winds Israel up is the fact that this rejection is by a famous  scientist and that science and technology drive its economy,” wrote Hilary and  Steven Rose, co-founders of the British Committee for the Universities of  Palestine. “Hawking’s decision threatens to open a floodgate with more and more  scientists coming to regard Israel as a pariah state.”

So far it’s been more of a trickle than a flood. In the U.S., the academic  boycott movement, which is aimed at pressuring Israel to change its policies  vis-à-vis the occupation of the Palestinian territories, has achieved some  symbolically significant victories in the past year. Both the Association for Asian American Studies and the American Studies Association backed the boycott against  Israeli universities, followed by the leadership council of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association. In  science, however, the boycott movement has so far made comparatively few  inroads.

“For us, it’s meaningless,” said Yair Rotstein, the executive director of the  United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation (BSF), which was established  in 1972 with an endowment funded by both countries. The boycott, he said, is  something blown up in the media: for all practical purposes, “there really is no  boycott.” Rotstein said that of about 7,000 requests to prospective external  reviewers it sends each year, the foundation gets just one response on average  from a scientist declining for political reasons.

Meanwhile, the BSF grants about $16 million in awards each year to American  and Israeli scientists working on joint projects, having funded over the years,  according to Rotstein, 42 Nobel Laureates. And since 2012, the BSF has partnered  with the National Science Foundation to support collaborative research in biology, chemistry, computational neuroscience and computer science (The BSF gets an additional $3 million  a year from the Israeli government to support these joint BSF-NSF projects.)

“The relations are widening,” Rotstein said.

“What’s happened in the last 10, 15, 20 years is that Israeli science has  really come into its own,” said Al Teich, a research professor of science,  technology, and international affairs at George Washington University. Teich is  also the former director of science and policy programs at the American  Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and a member of BSF’s  board.

“The country has become a major scientific power, disproportionate to the  size of the country and the size of the scientific establishment. Of course  there are political ties, emotional ties, between the U.S. and Israel, but  Israeli science is increasingly recognized throughout the world,” Teich  said.

The joint Cornell University-Technion-Israel Institute of Technology campus  being built in New York City was widely seen as a big step forward for the international reputation of Israeli  science. And just last week Israel achieved recognition as the first non-European member nation of the European Organization  for Nuclear Research, known as CERN, in what Israel’s science, technology and  space minister hailed in The Jerusalem Post as a case of  scientific interests trumping political ones: “Israeli science continues to  prove that it has the power to bridge the political disagreements we have with  Europe,” Yaakov Peri said.

Israel is also a participant in the European Union’s €80 billion (more than  $109 billion) research funding program, Horizon 2020. For months it was unclear  whether Israel would be able to join the massive research program after Israeli  officials objected to new EU guidelines barring funding to entities and projects  located outside Israel’s pre-1967 borders, specifically the Gaza Strip, the  Golan Heights and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem  The two  countries ultimately reached a compromise late last month, with the EU determining that  it would attach an appendix stating the applicability of its guidelines while  Israel would add its own appendix saying it disagreed with the guidelines on  political and legal grounds.

Steven Rose, the co-author of The Guardian op-ed on Hawking and an  emeritus professor of neuroscience at the Open University, said he saw the EU’s  “decision to reassert that it will not support any trading or research links  with Israeli institutions with branches/locations in Occupied Palestine” – and  the forcing of a compromise on this issue – as a positive sign for the boycott  movement.

“[I]t is clear that the boycott campaign is beginning to bite,” Rose wrote in  an email. “Much of it is manifest in quiet refusals by EU scientists to Israeli  invitations. But some is more public. Witness the [American Studies  Association’s] recent boycott vote – very clearly and succinctly worded.”

As far as science associations go, however, a spokeswoman for the largest  American-based science association, AAAS, said that the group has not been  approached about participating in the academic boycott movement. In 2006, the  association released a statement condemning a proposed boycott resolution on the  part of a British faculty union “as antithetical to the positive role of free  scientific inquiry in improving the lives of all citizens of the world, and in  promoting cooperation among nations, despite political differences.”

The American Physical Society’s Committee on International Freedom of  Scientists issued a statement in July affirming “the principle of open  scientific discourse and cooperation among scientists, regardless of nationality  or political belief” and urging all academic organizations to refrain from any  boycott of science and research.

“Even during the worst days of the former Soviet Union, we certainly had  physicists attend conferences all over the world; we never did anything in any  way to inhibit the communication among scientists,” said Michael Lubell, the  APS’s director of public affairs and the Mark W. Zemansky  professor of  physics at the City College of New York.

“Quite the contrary we believe that communication among scientists can  actually advance issues within the foreign policy arena.”

David Klein, a professor of mathematics and director of the climate science  program at California State University at Northridge, is a member of the  organizing collective for the U.S. Campaign for the Academic and Cultural  Boycott of Israel (USACBI). He doesn’t expect major science associations to back  a boycott resolution any time soon: “the natural sciences and mathematics  community are not very good on this issue,” he said. “There’s a dedication to  Israel that is stronger than maybe in other fields.”

That said, Klein does expect an increasing number of scientists and  mathematicians to individually endorse the boycott. Among the scholars who have signed their  names to USACBI’s call are Robert Trivers, a biologist at Rutgers University  and a winner of the prestigious Crafoord Prize, the physicist Jean Bricmont, of  Belgium’s Catholic University of Louvain, and the mathematician Ivar Ekeland, of  the University of British Columbia.

Science’s relative disinterest in the boycott movement aside, “I think that  the ASA endorsement of the academic boycott was extremely significant and I  think it could lead to the normalization of this as a proposal and eventually  maybe a university faculty senate endorsing the boycott,” Klein said. “But I  think there’s an intermediary stepping stone for that to happen, which is for  more student governments to endorse the boycott. Several already have.”

Samuel M. Edelman, the executive director of the Center for Academic  Engagement and faculty affairs adviser for the Israel on Campus Coalition,  argued, however, that the academic boycott movement has to date targeted “the  low-hanging fruit — easy, susceptible organizations that are really fairly  marginal in academia.”

By contrast there’s not much inclination toward a boycott, Edelman said, in  “the larger professional organizations that have very strong ties with Israeli  colleagues and Israeli institutions, especially in the STEM fields, in science,  technology, engineering, and medicine and also business and law. There are  strong institutional connections and there are many, many thousands of  individual joint faculty research projects between American faculty and Israeli  faculty.”

Supporters of Israeli higher education are pointing to the many scientific  ties in the current fight over the boycott. An ad campaign against the boycott,  scheduled to start today in The New York Times, has the  headline: “Boycott a Cure for Cancer? Stop Drip Irrigation in Africa? Prevent  Scientific Cooperation Between Nations?” The ad goes on to denounce the American  Studies Association and to highlight research at Israeli universities that has  led to drugs in the United States to treat Alzheimer’s, cancer, diabetes and  multiple sclerosis.

A “U.S.-Israel Innovation Index” released last month by the  U.S.-Israel Science and Technology Foundation attempts to quantify the scope of  research collaboration between the two countries. “As we talk about U.S.-Israel  relationships in light of some of the policies of academic institutions, the  fact that they ought to be focused on is as of 2010, 2,259 co-authored  scientific publications came out between the U.S. and Israel,” said Ann  Liebschutz, the foundation’s executive director.

“This is what matters.”

Read more: http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2013/12/20/boycott-movement-gains-traction-israeli-science-seems-largely-immune#ixzz2q20a2T5e Inside Higher Ed

The Non-Boycott of Israeli Science

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