Claudine Gay, an American political scientist and academic administrator, served as the Dean of Social Science and later as the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University before advancing to become the 30th President of this prestigious institution. She is notably the first Black American woman to hold this position. Her tenure was marked by her resignation amid accusations of "anti-Semitism".
Gay was a Harvard professor in Government and African American Studies, with research focusing on American political behavior, including voter participation, race and identity politics.
Early Life and Education
Born in 1970 in New York City to Haitian immigrant parents, Gay's mother was a nurse while her father worked as an engineer. She spent most of her childhood in New York before moving with her parents to fulfill her father's role in the American Army Corps of Engineers. She is a cousin of the acclaimed American writer Roxane Gay.
Claudine Gay was born in New York to Haitian parents
After high school, Gay attended Phillips Exeter Academy, a private boarding school in Exeter, New Hampshire, graduating in 1988. She then spent a year at Princeton University before transferring to Stanford University, where she majored in Economics and graduated in 1992. She received the Anna Laura Myers Prize for Best Senior Thesis in Economics and in 1998, earned her Ph.D. from Harvard University, winning the Toppan Prize for the Best Dissertation in Political Science.
Career Path and Academic Involvement
Gay began as an Assistant Professor, and later Associate Professor, in the Political Science Department at Stanford University between 2000 and 2006. During the academic year 2003-2004, she was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences.
She is considered a leading researcher in American political behavior, studying racial and ethnic politics in the United States, Black politics in the post-Civil Rights era, democratic citizenship, and more. Her work examined themes such as the effect of minority officeholders' elections on citizens' perceptions of their government and their interest in public affairs, how the environment shapes Black Americans' racial and political attitudes, and the roots of competition and cooperation among minorities, with a special emphasis on Black and Latino relations. She also dealt with the consequences of residential mobility programs on political participation among the poor.
Harvard University appointed Gay as a Government Professor in 2006 and as a Professor of African and African American Studies in 2007.
In 2015, she was named Dean of Social Science at Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences, and in 2018, she became the Dean of the faculty. Her efforts focused on expanding students' access and opportunities, stimulating excellence and innovation in teaching and research, and enhancing the college's academic culture. She drew attention to areas like climate change, race and ethnicity, and migration.
Gay successfully led the faculty through the COVID-19 pandemic, continually prioritizing both community health and academic continuity and progress.
Claudine Gay also held the position of vice-chair at the Midwest Political Science Association
She initiated and led an ambitious and comprehensive faculty-driven strategic planning process to reassess fundamental aspects of academic structures, resources, and processes and to foster academic excellence. Outside her involvement at Harvard and Stanford, Gay served as vice-chair of the Midwest Political Science Association from 2014 to 2017 and was a member of the Board of Trustees of Phillips Exeter Academy from 2017 to 2023.
Claudine Gay's Tenure as President of Harvard
In June 2022, Harvard University President Lawrence Bacow announced he would resign within a year, sparking a search for the successor. With 600 candidates considered, a committed led by businesswoman and former Senior Fellow at Harvard Corporation, Penny Pritzker, reviewed the candidates, ultimately selecting Claudine Gay to succeed Bacow, starting on July 1, 2023.
However, Gay's presidency at Harvard was short-lived. Following the Palestinian resistance's “Operation al-Qassam” against Israeli settlements surrounding Gaza on October 7, 2023, and the subsequent Israeli counterattack, Gay faced heavy criticism for not denouncing the attacks "appropriately." Among the critics was former Harvard President Lawrence Summers.
She also faced immense pressure from the pro-Israel lobby and was accused of "anti-Semitism" after describing anti-Israel demonstrations at the university campus as part of "freedom of expression."
On December 5, 2023, the Congressional Committee on Education and Labor summoned Gay along with University of Pennsylvania President Elizabeth Magill and MIT President Sally Kornbluth to a hearing on "holding university presidents accountable and combating anti-Semitism." They were accused by some congress members of not doing enough to condemn anti-Semitism and to combat it on campus.
During the hearing, Republican Representative Elise Stefanik Equated calls by some students for an "Intifada" to inciting "genocide against Jews in Israel and across the world." She asked Gay to clarify whether such rhetoric was against Harvard's code of conduct.
Gay responded, "We support freedom of expression even when it involves rejected, insulting, and heinous ideas. When discourse escalates to behavior that violates our policies – including those related to harassment or bullying – we take action."
Claudine Gay was ousted despite Harvard administration's support
Criticisms and Calls for Dismissal
Gay's response sparked criticism, and a letter signed by 70 congress members called for her dismissal, as well as for Magill and Kornbluth. Magill faced pressures within her university and resigned the following week after the hearing.
Later, Gay apologized for her congressional hearing response and clarified, "Some have conflated the right to free expression with the notion that Harvard University would overlook calls for violence against Jewish students. I want to be clear: Calls for violence or genocide against the Jewish community or any other ethnic or religious group are reprehensible, and those who threaten our Jewish students will be held accountable."
On December 11, more than 700 of Harvard's 2452 faculty members signed a letter opposing calls for Gay's dismissal. The Harvard Alumni Association stated it "unambiguously and unanimously" supported Gay's leadership, praising her "for protecting academia, freedom, and the rights of all students to express their views."
On December 12, the Harvard Corporation board stated it "unanimously" supported Gay's leadership, adding, "President Gay has apologized for how she handled her testimony before Congress and committed to redoubling the university's fight against anti-Semitism."
Nevertheless, the ongoing pressure ultimately led to Gay's resignation on January 2, 2024. In a statement, she said she resigned to prevent the controversy surrounding her from "damaging the university," noting, "It has become apparent that it is in the best interest of Harvard University that I step aside so it can move past this extraordinarily difficult period by focusing on the institution rather than the individual."
Despite her resignation, she affirmed that the campaign against her was based on lies, stating, "Those who relentlessly campaigned for my removal since the fall often used lies, personal insults, and not logical arguments."
Accusations of Plagiarism
The Israeli lobby's campaign against Claudine Gay didn't stop at anti-Semitism; she was also accused of plagiarism and improperly citing sources in about half of the 11 journalistic articles listed in her biography.
The accusations came from conservative activist Christopher Rufo and journalist Aaron Sibarium shortly after the congressional hearing in December 2023. Gay defended the integrity of her work and requested an independent review, while the Harvard Corporation stated that the review found "some examples of insufficient citation" in Gay's work but "no violation of Harvard standards regarding research misconduct."