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U. of Michigan Press and Pluto



Good summary article in "Inside Higher Ed" of the recent (ongoing?) brouhaha over the publication of a controversial book about Israel:

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/10/25/pluto

As someone who follows the university press world closely, I was very pleased to see that the University of Michigan administration chose to support its Press in the controversy. Without this kind of support, presses, which are having a difficult time right now anyway, wouldn't survive. A press without the support of its parent is a printer.

For those who haven't followed this story, the background is that the U. of Michigan Press has a distribution relationship with Pluto Press, a left-wing UK publisher. Pluto published a book that attacks current Israeli policy. The controversy was, What is UMP's responsibility in all this? Is UMP endorsing the argument of the book? If so, should it, etc.

It appears that the university handled the matter judiciously. It convened a group to review the situation, noted the commercial nature of the relationship between UMP and Pluto, and also cited the importance of academic freedom. The administration also is looking into guidelines for distribution partners in the future. I don't see how anyone could ask the university to do more or could hope for an outcome that was more responsible.

As an aside, without distribution agreements, many presses would not be able to publish the many other books (controversial and uncontroversial) that the academic community requires. These agreements are an important source of funding, and distribution is an important part of the strategies of such presses as Chicago, Hopkins, and Columbia, among others.

For the record: I haven't read the book in question, nor do I recall having read any book Pluto has ever published.

Joe Esposito