An appendix to a damning exposé of racism at Australian universities, suggesting it overestimates the incidence of campus racism at least twofold, has been removed from public view on the orders of the Australian Human Rights Commission (AHRC).
The 420-page technical document provided a detailed analysis of last yearâs âRacism@Uniâ survey. The document had been posted on the website of the Australian National Universityâs (Polis), which developed the survey.
The survey formed the backbone of the AHRCâs âRespect at Uniâ study, which reported that racism was âdeeply entrenchedâ in the sectorâs policies and practices, with 15 per cent of respondents saying they had personally experienced racism at university and 70 per cent reporting âindirectâ racism. Race discrimination commissioner Giridharan Sivaraman said the findings were âdeeply troublingâ and âreveal that universities are falling short of their duty of careâ.
Polisâ technical document offers a wealth of information that is not available in the AHRC report, including a detailed analysis of response bias in the survey. A questionnaire conducted by Polis found that students were more than twice as likely to have completed the survey, and staff were four times as likely, if they had personally experienced racism on campus.
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âThese patterns strongly suggest that theâŠsurvey disproportionately attracted participants with direct experiences of racism,â the Polis document says. âIts published figuresâŠshould be treated as an upper bound rather than an accurate estimate.â
The technical document has now been removed from the Polis website, after the AHRC issued a legal demand for it to be taken down. Polis director Matthew Gray said his centre had complied âpending university consideration of how to respondâ.
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Gray said the technical document had been referenced as âAppendix Eâ in the AHRC reportâs endnotes. âYou would assumeâŠthey wanted it to be in the public domain because theyâre referring people to it,â he said.
An AHRC spokeswoman did not say why the commission had issued the legal directive. She said the document and âfull survey datasetâ would be made available on a public research repository following âan extensive process of deidentificationâ. Gray said the Polis material did not identify any individuals.
The Polis document, unlike the AHRC report, compared the incidence of reported racism at universities with background rates in the broader community. It found that the community rates were more than twice as high.
International students were less likely to encounter racism at university than in public transport, social media, shops, housing or employment, the document says.
Its âkey findingâ was that the high levels of racism reported at universities âreflect wider racism across the Australian community, rather than simply being specific to universitiesâ.
Nevertheless, racism âimpacts negativelyâ on careers, study and mental health and is âdeleterious to peopleâs participation at university and their sense of belongingâ, the document says.
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The AHRC did not include any links to the Polis document in material promoting the study, but said it had referenced the document âthroughoutâ its report. The 248-page report contains two references to the document on page 239.
Education minister Jason Clare has vowed to change the threshold standards, which universities must comply with to maintain their registration, to require universities to show that âthey are taking action against racismâ. His office did not say whether he had been made aware of the Polis document, or read it.
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Times Higher Education asked the AHRC why its report had devoted the same amount of space to separate analyses of the MÄori and Pasifika communities â who constituted 0.5 per cent and 1.1 per cent of respondents respectively â as a combined analysis of Asian respondents, who made up 34 per cent of the sample. The commission offered no response.
â[There was a] heavy focus, as perhaps youâd expect, on a small number of particularly sensitive groups,â said Monash University policy expert Andrew Norton. âButâŠall the major international student source countries were put into this one Asian group. This is about a few maybe fashionable victim groups rather than the broader student experience.â
The Council of Australian Postgraduate Associations said the AHRC report lacked âgranular and statisticalâ data such as comparisons between different study levels. âThis severely limits our ability to use the report to inform robust policy changes,â said president Jesse Gardner-Russell.
âWe look forward to the full release of the study data so that postgraduate students can develop evidence-based and intersectional recommendations which combat the unique ways postgraduates experience racism.â
Salvatore Babones, a quantitative comparative sociologist at the University of Sydney, said the surveyâs âcensus-basedâ research design was known for generating response biases. The AHRC had marketed the survey using âlanguage which appeals to activistsâ, according to Polis.
Babones said the surveyâs âvery broad viewâ of racism had included respondentsâ feelings of being unable to express their views openly or getting lower marks than they deserved. âThe study also measured âindirectâ experiences of racism that occurred when students âwitnessed racism directed not at them but at other groupsâ. Itâs hard to know if these indirect experiences constituted racism at all.â
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