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FIREobjects after Ole Miss dismisses professor who complained about department chair

Following the announced nonrenewal of Garrett Felber, hundreds of scholars pledged to decline any association with Ole Miss until it justifies or reverses the decision. (Feng Cheng/Shutterstock)

FIRE sent a letter to the University of Mississippi today calling for 鈥渁 full and transparent account鈥 of why the university decided not to renew the contract of assistant history professor and asking the institution to reconsider its decision.

Felber, a public critic of Ole Miss鈥 record on racial equity issues, has at Ole Miss for four years. This year, he鈥檚 on leave, completing a at Harvard University's .

The administration鈥檚 notice letter cites Felber鈥檚 reluctance to have a real-time conversation with his supervisor. But, as 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Individual Rights Defense Program Director Adam Steinbaugh notes in our letter, Felber was being called to have that conversation to discuss his exercise of his First Amendment rights: 

Felber鈥檚 nonrenewal arose in the context of his public criticism. Indeed, his supervisor cited that public criticism as a basis for seeking to have a meeting with him. Accordingly, the University鈥檚 nonrenewal decision necessarily arises from his protected expression[.]

Second, the recommendation of nonrenewal, initiated by a supervisor publicly criticized by Felber, stands in stark contrast to her public praise of Felber less than four months earlier. As one federal appellate court has observed, 鈥渃onflict is not unknown in the university setting given the . . . academic freedom鈥 enjoyed by faculty. As Felber鈥檚 alleged misconduct amounts to little more than insisting that discussion on a contentious issue be conducted in writing, the excessive penalty imposed for this conflict, coupled with the supervisor鈥檚 reference to the public criticism, strongly suggests that the termination is motivated by Felber鈥檚 criticism, not his performance.

Following the announced nonrenewal, hundreds of scholars have signed an to Ole Miss Chancellor Glenn Boyce, pledging to decline 鈥渁ll invitations to speak at, conduct professional service for, or otherwise be associated with鈥 the university until the university either adequately justifies or reverses its nonrenewal of Felber.

If the letter Felber received is the sum total of Ole Miss鈥 rationale for his nonrenewal, it looks like retaliation for his criticism in violation of the First Amendment and should be reversed.

How we got here


Felber鈥檚 friction with the administration is related to his research and area of expertise, as listed in his : 鈥淸T]wentieth-century African American social movements, Black radicalism, and the carceral state.鈥 Felber is also the organizer of the program, which seeks to educate community members and the public about 鈥 between prison abolition and immigrant detention.鈥

In October, Felber that his chair had rejected a $42,000 grant to the Study and Struggle program, arguing that a 鈥減olitical鈥 program could jeopardize department funding. As Felber noted, that decision came two days after the University had a $57,000 grant to the same program. 

In the Twitter thread, Felber that UM 鈥減rioritizes racist donors over all else 鈥 this antiracist program threatens racist donor money. And racism is the brand. It鈥檚 in the name.鈥 He also echoed a Study and Struggle co-worker, that UM is 鈥渁n arm of the state. It creates knowledge to legitimize state violence, it polices, it gentrifies, it discriminates, it silences, and it obstructs antiracism, anticapitalism, and abolition.鈥

Evidently, the relationship between Felber and his administration did not improve thereafter.

On Dec. 10, Department Chair Noell Wilson wrote to Felber. As quoted in the , she informed Felber that the letter served as his 鈥渙ne-year notice of nonrenewal pursuant to the University of Mississippi鈥檚 Termination of Untenured Faculty policy[.]鈥 The reason for the nonrenewal, in Wilson鈥檚 words, was Felber鈥檚 preference for written communication: 

Respectfully, your effort to dictate or restrict the means by which I communicate with you is untenable. Your repeated refusal to talk with me makes it impossible for me to maintain a productive working relationship with you or supervise your faculty responsibilities.

Wilson listed she had attempted to have an oral conversation with Felber, one phone call and two proposed Zoom meetings. In each case, Felber responded that he preferred to communicate via email, and called on Wilson to address 鈥 to the department鈥檚 faculty members 鈥 the ramifications for academic freedom in the grant denial. 

As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter explains:

Felber did not refuse to communicate with his supervisor, but instead sought to channel communications on a particular subject to a written medium. His disinclination to 鈥渕eet further about this鈥濃斺渢his鈥 being the grant refusal鈥攚as instead interpreted by his supervisor as a refusal to meet at all, and amounts to a conflict that would be better addressed through, if anything, an express warning, not termination. [Emphasis added.]

Nuances and questions


While many of the headlines and reports about Felber鈥檚 case say that he was fired, that鈥檚 not legally accurate; a nonrenewal is not the same as a firing. As a non-tenured employee, Felber鈥檚 work is contractual; the wording of Wilson鈥檚 letter states that after the end of Felber鈥檚 current contract, he won鈥檛 be offered a new one. 

The timing of Wilson鈥檚 letter, however, reinforces the ambiguity between firing and nonrenewal. Felber鈥檚 contract ends in May; the letter informs him that he won鈥檛 be renewed after next December. Does that mean they intend to renew Felber鈥檚 contract in May, then terminate it in December? Under UM鈥檚 rules, terminating a contract requires showing 鈥渃ontumacious鈥 鈥 willfully insubordinate, basically 鈥 conduct. 

Felber鈥檚 speech as a private citizen on a matter of public concern is protected by the First Amendment and the principle of academic freedom. As an institution earning FIRE鈥檚 highest, 鈥淕reen Light鈥 rating in our Spotlight Database of speech policies, Ole Miss鈥檚 policies indicate its understanding and respect of those obligations. If the university attempted to punish or retaliate against that speech, it would violate Felber鈥檚 constitutional rights.

It鈥檚 possible the administration wasn鈥檛 at all offended by Felber鈥檚 description of their institution as a racist-funded capitalist shield for the police state. This could all be one big coincidence.

Generally, the government does not need a specific reason not to renew a contract. But while the government can decline to renew a contract for almost any reason, it can鈥檛 do it to retaliate against an employee for protected speech. 

There also seems to be a disconnect between how Felber and Wilson understood their interactions about Zoom meetings and phone calls. If Wilson never actually directed Felber to attend a meeting, but only requested he do so, then Felber鈥檚 rejection of those requests and expressed preference for continued email communication are probably not insubordinate. If, on the other hand, Wilson told Felber the meetings were mandatory, and he failed to attend a mandatory meeting, insubordination could be a non-retaliatory basis for nonrenewal. 

But even in that case, the circumstances of the nonrenewal 鈥 recommended by a supervisor who was publicly criticized by Felber and placed the request for conversations in that context 鈥 would require the university to show that it would have imposed this weighty penalty on Felber, a professor by the university just months earlier, even in the absence of his criticism. 

The big picture


It鈥檚 entirely possible that Ole Miss decided to nonrenew a respected scholar because he didn鈥檛 like Zoom meetings. It鈥檚 possible the administration wasn鈥檛 at all offended by Felber鈥檚 description of their institution as a racist-funded capitalist shield for the police state. This could all be one big coincidence. 

But Felber鈥檚 nonrenewal comes at a moment, well-explained by 鈥檚 Colleen Flaherty, in which the institution is facing multiple accusations of attempting to suppress critics who accuse it of turning a blind eye to racism. 

Among those controversies are that UM鈥檚 ombudsman was after he sued the university to avoid having to disclose information about confidential conversations, in theory to determine who leaked documents suggesting that the university has from donors. In another controversy, associate professor of sociology James Thomas was by state auditors for having participated in a Scholar鈥檚 Strike to protest racial injustice; UM has not commented on the investigation. (In October 2018, FIREreported on Thomas receiving backlash from some state legislators after he tweeted about disrupting the meals of political opponents.)

Given these and other recent and concerns, many are finding it hard to give the University of Mississippi the benefit of the doubt. 

What happens next


果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter requests a response by Dec. 30. As the notice of nonrenewal places Felber鈥檚 last day at one year from Dec. 31, his immediate future is to continue his Harvard fellowship. Meanwhile, the of UM will continue, and UM鈥檚 reputation will continue to suffer, until it either fully accounts for its actions 鈥 or acknowledges it can鈥檛, and walks them back.

You can read 果冻传媒app官方's full letter below:

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