Heterodox Academy (HxA) is a non-profitadvocacy group of academics working to counteract what they see as a lack of viewpoint diversity on college campuses, especially by encouraging political diversity.[3] The organization was founded in 2015 by Jonathan Haidt, Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz, and Chris C. Martin.
Membership was initially open to tenured and pre-tenure professors, but has been expanded to a range of other faculty ranks (including career/full-time as well as adjunct/part-time), and even non-faculty positions such as graduate students and postdoctorals. Initially, the group had a selective membership application process which is partly intended to address imbalances toward any particular political ideology.[5] In 2017, Heterodox Academy had about 800 total members.[5][12] By 2018, about 1,500 professors had joined, along with a couple hundred graduate students.[3]
In 2018, Debra Mashek, a professor of psychology at Harvey Mudd College, was appointed as the executive director of Heterodox Academy, a position which she held until 2020, after which an interim executive director was appointed.[3][13][14] In 2020, the organization had around 4,000 members.[15] John Tomasi, a political philosopher at Brown University, became the first president of Heterodox Academy in 2022. As of 2023, total membership was approximately 5,000.[16]
Programs and activities
In 2016 and 2017, Heterodox Academy published an annual Heterodox Academy Guide to Colleges, a ranking based on "political conformity and orthodoxy".[12][17][18][19]
The organization administers a "Campus Expression Survey", designed to allow professors and college administrators to survey their students' feelings about freedom of expression on campus.[22]
Ideology and reception
Heterodox Academy describes itself as non-partisan.[13] In 2018, the group's website described its mission as encouraging political diversity to allow dissent and challenge errors.[13]
In a study responding to Heterodox Academy's contentions of bias against conservative professors, Jeffrey Adam Sachs, a professor of political science at Canada's Acadia University, found that liberal professors were more often dismissed for their speech than were conservative professors.[23] According to Vox's Zack Beauchamp, Heterodox Academy advances conservative viewpoints on college campuses by ignoring the data and arguing that such views are suppressed by left-wing bias or political correctness.[24] In the same 2019 article, Beauchamp disputes Heterodox Academy's contention that college campuses are facing a "free-speech crisis", noting the lack of data to support it and arguing that advocacy groups such as Heterodox Academy functionally do more to narrow the scope of academic debates than any of the biases they allege.[24]
^"Heterodox Academy, Our Mission". Heterodox Academy. Retrieved January 15, 2022. Heterodox Academy was founded in 2015 by Jonathan Haidt, Chris Martin, and Nicholas Rosenkranz, in reaction to their observations about the negative impact a lack of ideological diversity has had on the quality of research within their disciplines.
^"In College Classrooms, A Spreading Silence On Hot-Button Topics". John Templeton Foundation. Retrieved January 16, 2022. Heterodox Academy was founded in 2015 by psychologist Jonathan Haidt, sociologist Chris Martin, and legal scholar Nicholas Rosenkranz because all three worried that a lack of ideological diversity within their disciplines was impacting the quality of research