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Yes Academic Bias is a Problem and We Need to Address it: a Response to Larregue

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A Reply to this article was published on 24 May 2018

The Original Article was published on 25 November 2017

Abstract

Larregue argued that while there is an ideological imbalance among academics that this imbalance has not unfairly impacted our findings. He also implies that it is the activism of conservatives, rather than progressives, which has created real problems in academia. As such he disputes claims that activism among progressive academics has create a backlash from political conservatives. However, Larregue does not address the previous empirical work on the subject of academic bias. Furthermore, his argument of methodological rigor does not address the tendency of scholars to overlook alternate theories. His argument that progressive scholars are no more biased than conservative scholars fails to account for the sheer number of progressive scholars relative to conservative scholars as it concerns the possibly of institutional bias. I also find his focus on fraud to be misplaced since scholars do not have to engage in fraud to be in ideological silos that do not take alternative theories into account. As to his second major argument, I am unsure whether liberal academic activism leads to conservative mistrust and await further future research on this topic. I do commend Larregue in bringing the question of sources of conservative mistust to our attention.

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Notes

  1. A similar argument has been made about the exclusion of African Americans scholars (Asante 1998; Karenga 2002) .

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Correspondence to George Yancey.

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This comment refers to the article available at https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-017-9366-9.

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Yancey, G. Yes Academic Bias is a Problem and We Need to Address it: a Response to Larregue. Am Soc 49, 336–343 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-018-9374-4

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