Posted by Jim Lindgren:
Another Example of Academic Consensus and Shunning.--

   My [1]last post on Alexandra Samuel's proposal for excommunicating
   political scientists like Condoleeza Rice received [2]this response
   from Jonah Goldberg saying that he was writing a book about the
   subject and wanted examples. So I thought that I would add another.

   In the 1960s, just AFTER Ronald Coase had done his Nobel Prize winning
   work in law & economics and AFTER James Buchanan had done his Nobel
   Prize winning work in public choice, a concerted effort was made by
   members of their department and the administration at the University
   of Virginia to drive them out of Virginia. The story has been often
   told and some reports say that some of the letters and memos showing
   that this was a conscious effort on Virginia's part survived to be
   seen by more open-minded members of the department in later years. A
   [3]run-in with the Ford Foundation helped to crytallize university
   opposition to the best scholars that the department ever had and among
   the best ever to teach in any department at Virginia. One view was
   that they were on the wrong side of history.

   Here is a comment that Coase made in an interview in Reason:

     They thought the work we were doing was disreputable. They thought
     of us as right- wing extremists. My wife was at a cocktail party
     and heard me described as someone to the right of the John Birch
     Society. There was a great antagonism in the '50s and '60s to
     anyone who saw any advantage in a market system or in a
     nonregulated or relatively economically free system.

   Since Coase and Buchanan had tenure, they couldn't be fired, but
   Virginia decided not to make an attractive offer to keep Coase when
   Chicago offered him a job, though Coase has said that he might well
   have stayed had they done so. Buchanan was driven out in part by not
   tenuring his junior colleagues. That this was done a few years after
   Coase and Buchanan had done their best work is just stunning. Virginia
   began the 1960s as the most innovative and creative among the world's
   great economics departments and ended the 1960s as just another pretty
   good department, no better or worse than a couple dozen other
   departments in the country.

   For more discussion on excommunicating scholars, see [4]Alexandra
   Samuel's response and these posts from [5]John Kalb, Jonah
   [6]Goldberg, [7]Jackal's Lair, and [8]Eugene.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2005_01_14.shtml#1105681838
   2. http://www.nationalreview.com/thecorner/05_01_09_corner-archive.asp#050256
   3. http://www.gmu.edu/jbc/fest/files/brady.htm
   4. http://alexandrasamuel.com/blog/index.php?p=34
   5. http://kalblog.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/2664
   6. http://www.nationalreview.com/thecorner/05_01_09_corner-archive.asp#050256
   7. http://www.jackalslair.com/wp-trackback.php/178
   8. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2005_01_07.shtml#1105656637

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