At the time, two student groups stood out in the fight for ethnic studies. One was the Ethnic Studies Action Committee (ESAC), a grassroots organization. The other was the group responsible for the 1995 concentration proposal--the Harvard Foundation's Academic Affairs Committee (AAC), which worked toward its goal by operating within the system.
After the 1995 effort petered out, the movement had a two-year lull. But then, in 1997, Michael K.T. Tan '01 and Nancy G. Lin '99-'00 decided they wanted to organize a revival. They worked on the Academic Affairs Committee to do so.
But one of Harvard's points of pride, its decentralization, became their main obstacle and was one of many factors eventually causing their effort to peter out, Tan said.
They paired concentrators with their departments, but Tan says it was a challenge for the students to familiarize themselves with individual department budgets, internal politics and individuals. And because there are so many departments, it was an even more daunting task.
"Everyone passes the buck," Tan says.
Tan adds he thinks it is more difficult to mobilize students around academic issues. Harvard's system and hiring practices make it difficult for students unaided by faculty or administrators to accomplish change.
"It's not like a public university, where there's that sort of accountability," Tan says.
Read more in News
Medical School to Build $300M Research FacilityRecommended Articles
-
Ethnic Studies Fight ContinuesMost Harvard students didn't notice the fluorescent green armbands worn by members of the Ethnic Studies Action Committee (ESAC) at
-
Show Supports Ethnic StudiesHalle Berry, Harvard Foundation's cultural Artist of the Year, joined hundreds of students by wearing a green armband expressing support
-
Students Try to Revive Ethnic Studies ActivismMembers of the Ethnic Studies Action Committee met last night in Loker Commons to discuss ways of reviving student awareness
-
Students Debate Ethnic StudiesStudents and faculty members called for students to take action to make Harvard devote more resources to ethnic studies at
-
Ethnic Studies Campaign Ready To Take ActionTwo months after proponents of an ethnic studies concentration initiated a new wave of activism with a panel discussion, campaign
-
Colors of ProtestThe Department of Afro-American Studies was born in 1969 amid the bitterest racial conflict in Harvard's history. In the months