Neri Oxman, wife of Bill Ackman, accused of plagiarism days after Claudine Gay resigns
Neri Oxman,
a tenured professor at MIT since 2017, completed her PhD dissertation at the
institution in 2010. The claims suggest that several paragraphs in Oxman's
dissertation contain instances of plagiarism, as they incorporate direct quotes
from sources without proper quotation marks.
According to
Business Insider, Oxman's 2010 dissertation appears to have lifted text from
the work of two Israeli scholars, Steve Winer and H. Daniel Wagner, dating back
to 1998. Additionally, allegations state that Oxman's dissertation borrowed
content from two separate articles written by NYU historian Peder Anker in 1995
and 2006. Another accusation involves the appropriation of text from a 1998
book by German physicist Claus Mattheck.
Specifically,
in the case of Mattheck's work, Oxman reportedly copied a paragraph without
using quotation marks or providing attribution, which, according to MIT
Handbook parameters, constitutes plagiarism. Neri Oxman has responded to these
allegations via social media.
The irony is
palpable, given the stringent stance against plagiarism that Oxman's husband,
Bill Ackman, a hedge fund manager, has taken in recent weeks. Ackman has been
actively involved in calling for the resignation of former Harvard University
president Claudine Gay following her congressional hearing on December 5, 2023,
regarding anti-Semitism at Harvard.
Conservative
media figures, joined by Ackman, a prominent Harvard donor, intensified their
demands for Gay's resignation. Right-wing journalists such as Chris Brunet,
Aaron Sibarium, and Christopher Rufo played a role in unearthing allegations
that Gay had plagiarized portions of her 2010 PhD dissertation. These claims
were strategically used to fuel animosity against Harvard's first Black
president by Rufo and The Free Beacon's Aaron Sibarium.
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