February 22, 2007

Denied Tenure, African-American MIT Stem Cell Researcher Starts a Hunger Strike

Boston Globe reports on the highly unusual strategy of Professor James Sherley, one of only 28 black faculty at MIT at the time of his tenure decision, whose denial of tenure seems irreversible. He opposes (quite prominently) embryonic stem cell research.

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December 11, 2004

If You Want Tenure at Berkeley, Do Not Criticize Agribusiness

Berkeley Daily Planet reports on an incredible case of tenure denial, one that should be telling for any junior scholar in bioethics who is thinking about being really critical of corporations that work with his or her institution - but who still wants tenure.

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November 19, 2004

Move Over, ISI Citation Index

Off topic a bit, but very important news for anyone who uses the web in research for scholarly papers and books: for years now, the ISI indices, a costly system of interrelated citation databases that track thousands of publications in dozens of disciplines, have been pretty much the only way to track how papers are cited and used. Many universities actually grade faculty on the basis of a "citation count" from ISI, and journals (like ours) make claims about their influence on the basis of similar ISI searches. Enter Google Scholar. This service will literally revolutionize the tracking of the lifetimes and reach of articles, because it at a minimum provides a much, much wider scan of articles than does ISI, and the implication of Google providing this service is that it can be integrated into the Internet at large. It is pretty easy to speculate that if John Dewey were alive, he would mark this event among the more important possible links between the scholarly world and public discourse. According to MIT's Blogdex, the best ranking of "who is visiting what on the Internet," scholar.google.com was the single most visited site on the entire Internet today. Needless to say, bioethics journals and their publications show up all over this thing, which is still in beta by the way, and it will be fun to pick around. If you find anything (after you do your vanity search) let us know.

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October 24, 2004

Bioethics Tenure and Moves from Penn

The Chronicle ran "Penn's Medical School Denies Tenure to 2 Bioethicists" in this week's issue, in a piece whose purported focus was the move of McGee from Penn to Albany. Jeffrey Brainard commented on the tenure situation in the Penn department of medical ethics. Brian Leiter blogs the topic.

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