Political views of American academics
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
“It is a truism that socialism is dead, and an irony that it survives most robustly as a doctrine not in Paris, where it has suffered a fate worse than falsification by becoming thoroughly unfashionable, nor in London, where it has been abandoned by the Labour Party, but in the universities of capitalist America, as the ideology of the American academic nomenklatura.” --"The End of History, Again?" (1989) by John Gray |
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The political views of American academics began to receive attention in the 1930s, and investigation into faculty political views expanded rapidly after the rise of McCarthyism. Demographic surveys of faculty that began in the 1950s and continue to the present have found higher percentages of liberals than of conservatives, particularly among those who work in the humanities and social sciences. Researchers and pundits disagree about survey methodology and about the interpretations of the findings.
See also
- Heterodox Academy
- Academic bias
- Media bias
- Political issues in higher education in the United States
- Political correctness in education
- Tenured Radicals (1990) by Roger Kimball
- Higher Superstition (1994) by Paul R. Gross and Norman Levitt