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Title VI of the Higher Education Act
Summary by Amy W. Newhall, Executive Director of MESA

Title VI of the Higher Education Act was instituted by Congress in 1958 (then under the name the National Defense Education Act.) Its purpose is to build and strengthen American education in foreign languages and area/international studies programs in order to insure a supply of experts to meet national needs. Federal funding through this program now provides support for 124 National Resource Centers located in universities and focusing on different regions of the world. Host universities are selected after a rigorous and highly competitive peer reviewed application process every three years (changed to every four years in 2005.) Currently, 17 of these 124 centers are devoted to the study of the Middle East (roughly Morocco to Afghanistan.) Current authorization extensions for the programs in the Higher Education Act expire at the end of December 2006. Before each reauthorization, Congress amends additional programs, changes the language and policies of existing programs, or makes other changes. Overall funding for Title VI has dropped steadily since its highpoint in 1967 (at least 35% lower than 1967 in constant dollars.) In this latest round individual centers receive on average $229, 412 per year for operations and programs (total for all 17 Middle East programs: approximately $3,900,000.) On average, each university also will receive about $236,200 in fellowship money which goes directly to support students of language and area studies.

The current reauthorization process has been drawn out and contentious. At the heart of the controversy are claims from groups outside the academy that Middle East Centers are overly critical of Israel and of U.S. policy in the Middle East. Individual faculty members have been accused of being unpatriotic, anti-Semitic, and anti-American. New authorization language has been proposed that threatens to nullify statutory provisions in place since 1958 prohibiting federal direction, supervision, or control over the curriculum, program of instruction, administration, or personnel of any educational institution. (Back to academic freedom)