8 April 2010
Date: Thu, 8 Apr 2010 15:53:45
+0100
From: Joanne Roberts
<joanne.roberts[at]NEWCASTLE.AC.UK>
Subject: [CSL] Artivism as research and tenure - Ricardo Dominguez
To:
CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE[at]JISCMAIL.AC.UK
From: rdom[at]thing.net
[mailto:rdom[at]thing.net]
Sent: 08 April 2010 14:42
To: CYBER-SOCIETY-LIVE[at]JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: Artivism as research and tenure - Ricardo Dominguez
Ricardo Dominguez (Associate Professor, Visual Arts, UCSD) is currently being
threatened with criminal action and the revocation of his tenure by UCOP
and several UCSD senior administrators. This is a long, rapidly-developing
story. Time is of the essence; Ricardo meets with our SVC on the morning
of Thursday, April 7.
UC Office of the President has reportedly been upset over Ricardo's involvement
in the Transborder Immigrant Tool - these are recycled cell phones loaded
with software that points border-crossers to caches of fresh water in the
desert, obviously saving lives. It's a controversial project, to say the
least; and Ricardo has received death threats from people in the SD community
and beyond. The project was picked up by the national and international presses,
and CNN named Ricardo one of its "Most Interesting People" of 2009 because
of the project. Several Republican congressmen also recently sent a letter
to UCSD demanding that the project be ceased and Ricardo be censured. In
response to this, the university has been scrambling to find a way to shut
it down. Importantly: the project has been included in every one of Ricardo's
professional reviews over the last few years, all of which have gone successfully
(and have been signed off on by this very SVC); in addition, the project
has been FUNDED by UCSD (and yet again, signed off on by this SVC). Now that
the controversy has gotten attention in DC, they're reversing course.
More recently, as part of the March 4 actions, Ricardo's bang.lab created
a virtual sit-in on the UCOP web site. A virtual sit-in works in this way:
participants go to a specified web page, which continuously "refreshes"
connections to the target web page (in this case, ucop.edu). This obviously
increases traffic to that site - much like a live sit-in at a specified locale
- with the potential effect of making it too busy to accept new incoming
connections. It is similar, in form, to what's called a "Distributed Denial
of Service Attack" (DDOS). There are several critical difference between
a virtual sit-in and a DDOS: a DDOS is prolonged and unending, used by various
governmental groups to censor a wide variety of free speech groups, activist
groups, etc, and non-transparent (the creators of the DDOS set up virtual
robots to blast a given site with millions of hits, and hide the creators
behind various firewalls and filters. A virtual sit-in is open, does not
use such "robots," and the creators are identified freely).
Please sign the petition below to protect academic freedom and tenure from
politically-motivated attacks.
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/stop-the-de-tenuring-of-ricardo-dominguez
Ricardo Dominguez (Associate Professor, Visual Arts, UCSD) is currently being
threatened with criminal action and the revocation of his tenure by UCOP
and several UCSD senior administrators. This is a long, rapidly-developing
story. Time is of the essence; Ricardo meets with our SVC on the morning
of Thursday, April 7.
UC Office of the President has reportedly been upset over Ricardo's involvement
in the Transborder Immigrant Tool - these are recycled cell phones loaded
with software that points border-crossers to caches of fresh water in the
desert, obviously saving lives. It's a controversial project, to say the
least; and Ricardo has received death threats from people in the SD community
and beyond. The project was picked up by the national and international presses,
and CNN named Ricardo one of its "Most Interesting People" of 2009 because
of the project. Several Republican congressmen also recently sent a letter
to UCSD demanding that the project be ceased and Ricardo be censured. In
response to this, the university has been scrambling to find a way to shut
it down. Importantly: the project has been included in every one of Ricardo's
professional reviews over the last few years, all of which have gone successfully
(and have been signed off on by this very SVC); in addition, the project
has been FUNDED by UCSD (and yet again, signed off on by this SVC). Now that
the controversy has gotten attention in DC, they're reversing course.
More recently, as part of the March 4 actions, Ricardo's bang.lab created
a virtual sit-in on the UCOP web site. A virtual sit-in works in this way:
participants go to a specified web page, which continuously "refreshes"
connections to the target web page (in this case, ucop.edu). This obviously
increases traffic to that site - much like a live sit-in at a specified locale
- with the potential effect of making it too busy to accept new incoming
connections. It is similar, in form, to what's called a "Distributed Denial
of Service Attack" (DDOS). There are several critical difference between
a virtual sit-in and a DDOS: a DDOS is prolonged and unending, used by various
governmental groups to censor a wide variety of free speech groups, activist
groups, etc, and non-transparent (the creators of the DDOS set up virtual
robots to blast a given site with millions of hits, and hide the creators
behind various firewalls and filters. A virtual sit-in is open, does not
use such "robots," and the creators are identified freely).
Please sign the petition below to protect academic freedom and tenure from
politically-motivated attacks.
Dear President Yudof, Chancellor Fox, SVC Drake, and other concerned
parties:
We the undersigned write in support of Ricardo Dominguez (Associate Professor,
Visual Arts, UCSD) and his collaborators at b.a.n.g lab. We have recently
heard disturbing news about Professor Dominguez's tenure being placed under
review in response to several of his recent research and performance projects,
and we are deeply concerned about such developments. Professor Dominguez
is an internationally renowned performance artist and researcher whose work
has been curated and anthologized in a wide range of venues; he is known
as an exemplary artist, scholar, and teacher; and we count ourselves fortunate
to have him as a colleague within the UC system. We write to provide some
disciplinary context for his work, which we hope will encourage you to abandon
any potential efforts to revoke his tenure.
We understand the projects in question to be:
(1) Professor Dominguez's participation in the inter-institutional project
"Transborder Immigrant Tool"; and
(2) Professor Dominguez's participation in a virtual sit-in on the UCOP web
site as part of the collective actions taken on March 4, 2010 in response
to the current crises facing public higher education in California.
The Transborder Immigrant Tool is an innovative project that cross-cuts
technology and the arts. Using low-cost and recycled mobile phones loaded
with mapping software, the project aims to reduce deaths and serious
illnesses/injuries for those traveling through California%u2019s deserts.
Although this project has been met with some controversy in the press, we
see this work as being imminently ethical and, perhaps just as importantly,
a serious and innovative extension of precedents in performance research
that have similarly aimed to pose questions about structural inequality,
citizenship and civility, and humanitarianism. Such questions have occupied
performance traditions throughout the 20th and 21st centuries; Dominguez's
work, in this regard, is both part of a longer disciplinary tradition in
performance and the visual arts and, importantly for the UC, an innovative
and forward-thinking extension of these queries to the problems and conditions
that define our contemporary age.
It is also important to note, despite sensationalist media reports to the
contrary, that the Transborder Immigrant Tool has not as yet been used by
anyone unaffiliated with b.a.n.g lab. It is still in development, with input
from non-profit border organizations and the Border Patrol. We understand
that UCSD has received complaints from several members of the US Congress
who have unfortunately been misinformed about the project's scope, and who
are attempting to intervene into the practice of academic and artistic freedom.
As scholars and artists who have chosen to work in the context of a public
institution in the interest of the "greater good,"
we find such interventions from political representatives into university
research projects to be unethical and in breach of their responsibilities
as elected leaders.
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/stop-the-de-tenuring-of-ricardo-dominguez
You can also send letter directly to:
Write a letter expressing your concerns about this issue, supporting our
research, calling for an end to the investigations and an end to the harassment
of Ricardo Dominguez and bang.lab/EDT members to:
"Kester, Grant" <gkester[at]ucsd.edu>, "Larsen, Kristina"
<klarsen[at]ucsd.edu>, "Lerer, Seth" <slerer[at]ucsd.edu>,
"Lawrence.Pitts[at]ucop.edu"
<Lawrence.Pitts[at]ucop.edu>, "Rosen, Amy"
<arosen[at]ucsd.edu>, "SVC Academic Affairs"
<SVCAA[at]ucsd.edu>, "Ricardo Dominguez"
<rrdominguez[at]ucsd.edu>
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