Steve Basile challenges Harvard's latest domestic violence junk-science
‘study’
Researcher Hides Domestic Violence Study Behind University Lawyers
July 13, 2004
by
Mark Charalambous
The two
most abused words in the English language are “studies show…”
This dictum was recently underscored by Harvard University’s refusal
to release the underlying data of a study done under the auspices of
their School of Health. The data had been requested by Steve Basile,
Research Director of CPF/The Fatherhood Coalition, a statewide non-profit
that advocates for father’s rights. The study in question addressed
“battered mothers” who ostensibly suffer “human rights abuses” at the
hands of the Massachusetts family court system.
Steve Basile, feminist scholar’s worst nightmare, is at it again.
This time he’s debunking a second incarnation of the 2002 Wellesley
junk-science study, “Battered Mothers Speak Out - A Human Rights Report
on Domestic Violence and Child Custody in the Massachusetts Family
Courts.”
Dr. Jay Silverman, an assistant professor in the Department of Society,
Human Development, and Health at Harvard, recently dusted off this
shabby excuse for scientific research, giving it a new name and a
second run up the credibility flagpole. “Child Custody Determinations
in Cases Involving Intimate Partner Violence: A Human Rights Analysis,”
was published in the American Journal of Public Health in May.
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Harvard junk-science
researcher Jay Silverman |
After scaling the usual barriers and jumping through the typical
hoops (details following), Basile received a terse, threatening letter
from Diane E. Lopez, of the Office of the General Counsel for Harvard.
The letter rejects Basile’s request for supporting data:
“As to all other data supporting Dr. Silverman’s research, Harvard
and Dr. Silverman decline your request. Neither Harvard University
nor its individual faculty members are obligated to share research
data indiscriminately with anyone who requests.”
But Basile is not some “indiscriminate … anyone.” The first phase
of his groundbreaking study on domestic violence abuse protection
orders (“Comparison of Abuse Alleged by Same- and Opposite-Gender
Litigants as Cited in Requests for Abuse Prevention Orders”) was recently
published in the February edition of Journal of Family Violence.
However, Basile is persona non grata in the domestic violence
community because not only has he produced a study that is scientifically
speaking beyond reproach (Basile has a Master’s degree in math from
UMass Lowell), but he has also assumed the burden of debunking domestic
violence junk science.
The Harvard General Counsel letter closes in typical legal bullying
fashion:
“This is our final word on this subject. Do not contact Dr. Silverman
again. If you wish to pursue this, despite this letter, then have
your legal counsel contact me.”
Harvard’s tarnished reputation
Along with the “Gentleman’s C,” a catchphrase for the GPA objective
of underachieving undergraduates who slough off their studies, in
2001 the “Harvard A” entered the vernacular to characterize dumbed-down
academic grading policies. Harvard received notoriety when whistleblower
(and tenured) professor Harvey Mansfield publicized the history
of grade inflation over the past three decades at the university.
In 2002, over 50 percent of students received grades of A or A-minus
at Harvard, while fully 91 percent of graduating students had some
kind of honor on their diplomas.
This hiding of research data by Harvard marks yet another black spot
for the academic Goliath, this time to its School of Public Health.
Study’s methodology flawed
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| Letter
from Harvard U. General Counsel denying request for data. |
The ‘Battered Mothers Speak Out’ Wellesley study on which
Silverman’s study is based was released in November, 2002. It purported
to show that battered women are being abused by the state's family
courts by awarding custody of their children to their “batterer” husbands,
thus endangering the children of these parents. It even claims that
the human rights of these women are being violated by the courts.
According to Lundy Bancroft, one of the authors, “Domestic violence
is not being weighed properly in the cases.”
In typical junk-science fashion, the research made absolutely no
attempt at objectivity. The desired results clearly preceded and guided
the development of the study. To achieve the expected results, the
researchers engineered an appropriate population sample and solicited
“expert” testimony from the plethora of feminist, anti-male practitioners
employed in family law and domestic relations.
Rather than look at a representative cross-section of all female
litigants in custody battles – or of all litigants, male and female,
who claimed to be “abused” by their mates – inclusion in the population
required that a participant be 1) female, and 2) angry at the outcome
of her case. Once a candidate was found, so-called “snowball sampling”
was used to find other potential participants. That is, a disgruntled
female litigant recommended other disgruntled mothers to the researchers.
Story on Basile’s study was in
the works
Following publication of the Silverman study, newspaper reports
of the alleged “human rights violations” study immediately appeared
in the Massachusetts press, including a story by reporter Patricia
Norris in the (Springfield) Republican.
Basile had been working with Norris on a story about the recent publication
of his research study on 209A restraining orders in Gardner District
Court. Despite spoonfeeding the reporter a story rife with controversy
and intrigue, it somehow escaped publication. Basile contacted
Norris to express his dissatisfaction with the Republican’s
apparent squelching of the story, and to voice his objections to the
Silverman junk-science study.
|
| “Harvard
University may have a multi-million dollar endowment and a
brain trust of attorneys but we have something much more powerful
on our side. We have our credibility and the truth.”
–
Steve Basile |
|
Basile wrote Norris:
“If you recall, the main reasons for doing the research was to combat
a tidal wave of junk science painting a distorted view of domestic
violence, its perpetrators, and victims. I have spent countless
hours chasing sensational claims and factoids that fall apart under
scrutiny or even a cursory examination. I am continually frustrated
that claims made by certain groups are never fact-checked but are
just parroted by the media leading to distortion of public perception.”
Alluding to the obstacles put in his way to do research – including
changing the Public Records Law (Mass. version of the Freedom of Information
Act) to expressly prevent anyone with a contrary viewpoint from doing
research on domestic violence – Basile continues:
“. . . this work is pure propaganda, junk science, with no scientific
value whatsoever, yet it has spawned sensational stories in the Boston
Herald, Boston Globe, Boston Phoenix, and now two
recent stories in the Republican. I urge you to obtain
a copy of this ‘study’ from the Wellesley Center for Woman and see
for yourself. How is it that these groups can say whatever
they wish without question from the media and with immunity while
other groups such as ourselves are stopped from doing honest research
with new laws spawned by these very groups?”
Researcher and Harvard stonewall
Basile
Basile then pursued the data with Silverman himself. On June 2, Basile
wrote directly to Silverman requesting the data, including transcripts,
police reports, restraining orders, child protective service reports,
witness affidavits and any other data (but not the identities
of the subjects). After receiving no reply, he wrote a second
time.
Finally, Basile then received a terse two-sentence reply from Silverman
denying the request: “The data in question are protected by a federal
certificate of confidentiality. There is no possibility of their
release.”
Upon researching Silverman’s excuse for withholding the data, he
found that “a Federal Certificate of Confidentiality protects the
privacy of individuals who are the subject of such research by withholding
from all persons not connected with the conduct of such research the
names or other identifying characteristics of such individuals.”
|
| “This
work is pure propaganda, total junk science, with no scientific
value whatsoever, yet it has spawned sensational stories in
the Boston Herald, Boston Globe, Boston Phoenix, and now two
recent stories in the Republican.”
–
Steve Basile |
|
However, the research paper itself claimed that pseudonyms had already
been incorporated into the interview transcripts. Thus, the identities
of the research subjects had already been disguised. Even if
they hadn’t, there is no reason why the identities couldn’t be expunged
from the data before turning it over. This is done all the time when
sensitive data is requested from the government by interested parties.
Besides replying to Silverman with this information and repeating his
request, he cc’d the prominent individuals at the American Journal of
Public Health, the appropriate people at the
Republican, as well
as the President of Harvard, Lawrence Summers.
Not expecting any positive response from Silverman, Basile then wrote
a detailed account directly to Dr. Summers, questioning the credibility
of the university that permits one of its professors to hide data.
In the June 10 letter, Basile asks Summers:
“It is clear that Dr. Silverman is in breach of the general APA guidelines
that require any researcher who is published to make his data available
for the next five years. It is clear that Dr. Silverman wishes
that his work not be scrutinized. As president of Harvard University
I am sure you are very concerned about the standards you maintain,
about your perception in the larger community. What credibility does
a university have if it is afraid of challenge?”
The letter from Harvard’s General Counsel is Summers’ response. The
corruption of the behavioral social sciences – and now, health sciences
– persists unabated.
Basile says: “This is not a legal matter. It is an ethical
and academic standards issue. Harvard University and/or its
faculty members are absolutely obligated to supply research data required
by APA guidelines, which all credible researchers adhere to.”
He warns: “Since this is not a legal issue this battle will not be
fought in a courtroom. It will be waged via academic debate
and by using public forums to pressure higher standards.”
Agenda-driven feminist research thrives in a closed environment
where access to data is restricted to the converted. The “research”
is incestuously peer-reviewed – if at all – by others within the sisterhood.
But Basile and the Fatherhood Coalition are undeterred.
Basile gets the final word here: “Harvard University may have a multi-million
dollar endowment and a brain trust of attorneys but we have something
much more powerful on our side. We have our credibility and
the truth.”
Mark Charalambous
Interested parties can obtain Basile’s study at: www.kluweronline.com/issn/0885-7482/contents.
Basile can be contacted at: stevebasile@comcast.net.
The Silverman study
can be found at: www.ajph.org/content/vol94/issue6/index.shtml
Jay Silverman’s web page at the Harvard School of Public Health (www.hsph.harvard.edu)
is: www.hsph.harvard.edu/faculty/JaySilverman.html
This is the second installment in the "Lying Liars" series
of exposés on feminist social science research by Mark Charalambous.
Part 1 can be found at: www.fatherhoodcoalition.org/cpf/newreadings/2003/MC_dv_month.htm
For
more by the author on the same subject, read “Junk science proliferates
in domestic violence research; Subtext: Intellectual corruption
of the social sciences” at: www.fatherhoodcoalition.org/cpf/2003/junk_science.htm.