Harvard Pledges Reforms Following Internal Reports On Antisemitism And Anti-arab Bias

harvard pledges reforms following internal reports on antisemitism and antiarab bias

Harvard University is promising to review its academic offerings and admissions policies in response to a pair of internal reports on antisemitism and anti-Arab prejudice at the Ivy League campus commissioned in the aftermath of last spring's pro-Palestinian protests .

Harvard released the reports on Tuesday while the university simultaneously battles the Trump administration over demands to limit campus activism - reforms the government says are necessary to root out campus antisemitism. The administration has frozen 2.2 billion in federal funding and Harvard responded with a lawsuit in a clash that is being watched closely across higher education.

In a campus message, Harvard President Alan Garber said Harvard has made "necessary changes and essential progress" over the last year but promised further action.

"We will redouble our efforts to ensure that the University is a place where ideas are welcomed, entertained and contested in the spirit of seeking truth," Garber wrote.

Garber convened two panels to study campus antisemitism and anti-Muslim bias last year, with an initial round of recommendations released last June. The final reports total more than 500 pages and include dozens of recommended changes.