A UCLA Town Hall on #MeToo and related issues in archaeology leaves more questions than it answers--but confirms that an accused harasser and bully is out of a job. [Updated Aug 3, 2020: Ran Boytner's rival field school organization gathers steam, he says]

Last year the IFR ran 57 archaeology field schools with 380 students from all over the world
Out of the picture: Former IFR exec dir Ran Boytner

Those who have been following this blog over the past several months know that I have been reporting on a complicated series of related incidents of misconduct and coverups involving the University of California, Santa Barbara; UCLA's Cotsen Institute of Archaeology; and the Institute for Field Research. The dramatis personae have included UCSB archaeologist Danielle Kurin, found guilty in a Title IX proceeding in 2016 of retaliating against students who complained about sexual harassment by her partner, Peruvian archaeologist Enmanuel Gomez Choque; the UCSB administration, which kept the truth from the university's anthropology department and allowed Kurin to come back to teaching and research; Ran Boytner, former executive director of the IFR, who knew about Kurin's misconduct but allowed her to run an IFR field school in 2018, where two female students were sexually assaulted by Gomez; Boytner's own long history of sexual misconduct, bullying, and retaliation; the IFR governing board and most notably its current chair, Cotsen Institute director Willeke Wendrich; and most recently, the UCSB Title IX office, which has now ruled that a sexual assault complaint filed by a student at the 2018 IFR field school must be closed because it did not take place in the US (thus jumping the gun on a Trump administration Title IX rule change that does not take effect until August 14.)

As I said, this is a very complicated story with lots of moving parts, but readers who have not followed up until now can catch up by clicking on the four links above, which include all of my reporting so far on these subjects.

It turns out that among members of the archaeological and scientific communities reading my blog posts were graduate students at UCLA's Cotsen Institute. On May 29, 19 of the grad students (representing just under half of the total students enrolled at the Cotsen), sent a letter to the Cotsen faculty. This letter led to a Zoom Town Hall which took place yesterday, June 11, details of which I will relate below. The letter is two pages long, but let me excerpt some relevant parts:


Dear Cotsen Faculty,

In recent weeks, it has come to the attention of the graduate student body of the Cotsen
Institute that the board and director of the Institute for Field Research (IFR) - both intimately
connected to the Cotsen itself - have come under serious scrutiny by the archaeological
community. The disturbing allegations against Danielle Kurin, current Assistant Professor in
the Anthropology Department at UCSB and IFR Academic Board member from 2016-2018,
and Ran Boytner, Executive Director of the IFR and former employee of the Cotsen
Institute, are very troubling and merit discussion within the Cotsen community. We hope
that in writing this letter, students of the Cotsen can gain clarity on this matter and
reassurance that future incidents of this nature will be addressed in a fair and transparent
manner.

Both of the individuals named above have been connected to the Cotsen Institute in some
capacity during this academic year. Kurin was invited to speak at the Cotsen Pizza Talk
Series this Spring quarter. Upon learning about the charges against her, students took
action to disinvite her. In the past, Boytner has also been permitted to enter undergraduate
classes at UCLA to recruit students for IFR field schools and has attended numerous talks
given at the Cotsen. Will Boytner be permitted to enter classes at UCLA or to attend Cotsen
talks, either virtually or in person, in the future? As students enrolled in the Cotsen
Archaeology and Conservation programs, we are concerned for the reputation of our
institution as well as our safety within the Institute and in the field.

The letter goes on to list four main allegations, sourcing them with links to my blog posts, and asks the faculty to "respond in full" to them. The letter concludes, "we hope that the entire Cotsen community--faculty, students, and staff--can engage in a dialogue to determine how we can all feel safe and supported in any environment that we work in."


The Town Hall meeting.

Although the Zoom meeting was invitation only, two individuals who participated provided me with, in one case, very detailed notes, and in the second case, a full video recording of the meeting. While I occasionally paraphrase what was said, the exact quotes I provide below are based on careful transcription and so I do not expect them to be challenged.

The format of this meeting was as follows: Richard Lesure, a MesoAmerican archaeologist in the UCLA anthropology department, acted as moderator. Most of the questions from students, submitted either ahead of time or in the chat box, were responded to by Wendrich. In addition, Jason de Leon, another UCLA anthropologist and member of the IFR's academic boarrd, made a number of comments.

The meeting was also attended by a bevy of guests from the UCLA administration: Natalie Ann Landau, the university Ombudsperson, who took an active role; Andrea Kasko, chair of the Graduate Council; Darnell Hunt, Dean of Social Sciences; David Schaberg, Dean of Humanities; and Mohammed Cato, director of UCLA's Title IX office.

During the meeting, a number of outright lies were told about this reporter by Willeke Wendrich and Jason de Leon, which I will deal with at the end of this report. But first, I will hit the highlights of what was discussed.

The meeting began at 2:06 pm Pacific Coast time, June 11. The first 40 minutes or so covered the history of the IFR, its structure, its relationship with UCLA and other institutions under whose academic wing it had operated (field school students receive academic credit for attending, although they pay their fees directly to IFR), as well as the formal sexual harassment policies and procedures that IFR has adopted.

Finally, at 2:40 pm, Wendrich was asked the question that had never publicly been answered all these months: "Does Ran Boytner currently work for IFR at all?" Wendrich responded, "No," thus providing the first official acknowledgement that he had in fact been fired, after running IFR since its inception in 2011. (This was already obvious, as his name had been removed from the IFR Web site many weeks before, without explanation.)

This was followed by questions about Kurin's own tenure on the IFR board in 2017 and 2018, and the fact that she had even volunteered to be on IFR's sexual harassment committee. As I previously reported, and as Wendrich acknowledged during the meeting, IFR "severed all ties" with Kurin after Gomez committed sexual assaults at the 2018 field school.

There was then a lot of discussion of the allegations in my blog posts, which Lesure pointed out was the "catalyst" for the letter from the grad students that led to the meeting. Willeke and de Leon denied my charges that at least some members of the IFR board knew about Kurin's history before the 2018 field school. Wendrich in particular branded my claims "ridiculous." (I stand by my reporting on that; see last section.) Wendrich and de Leon talked about their actions when misconduct were made against Kurin by students at the 2018 field school, and the investigation they undertook which led to the severance of ties between IFR and Kurin (covered in my blog posts.)

One clear feature of the statements made about Boytner was an obvious attempt to distance the governing and academic boards from the actions of the organization's long-time executive director. De Leon, for example, said that Boytner took no "public stance" about the charges against Kurin and "didn't take [it] seriously at the time."

Wendrich added that "there are things we cannot talk about" but that "there was a breach of trust between the IFR board of governors and Boytner, so we terminated our relationship with the founding director, Ran Boytner is no longer executive director. These are personnel matters, we are opening ourselves up to litigation if I say more."

Wendrich was also asked about the allegations in my reports that Boytner had sexually harassed and bullied staff members. "I cannot go into detail," she responded, but said that she had tried to mediate a situation involving Boytner and a staff member. "Ran Boytner has an aggressive way of addressing people, and if you know him, you know that it's pretty innocent, but if you don't know him so well it can be conceived as being threatening...let's just say that human relations are not his forte."

Wendrich declined to comment on Boytner's own Title IX proceeding at UCLA in 2009, although de Leon claimed he was not aware of it until I reported the details. But apparently to make sure that Boytner was thrown completely under the bus, Lesure suddenly came out with the following revelations at 3:36 pm:

"Setting aside my moderator role, my only contacts with the Ombudsman office have been over Ran Boytner [who had been a student at UCLA.] He was the worst [teaching assistant] I ever had, he was bullying a female student, we worked in out back in 1996 with the Ombudsman's office. [That] helped me realize what a bully [he] was, and his pattern of bullying behavior towards me resulted in my not speaking to him for 20 years."

This comment drew a furious look from Wendrich and raised eyebrows among almost everyone else, for good reason. If UCLA faculty knew back in 1996 that Boytner was a bully, how did he end up having a career leading one of the world's most important archaeology field schools?

Soon after,  the meeting devolved into a discussion of IFR's future, which, several of its leaders pointed out, should be bright. (Although the 2020 field season was cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic, the institute hopes to begin again in 2021 with a new staff and presumably a new executive director--right now the governing board is serving that role.)


Shooting the messenger means enabling predators and bullies.

As I mentioned above, a number of lies were told about me and my reporting, in a situation where I had no ability to counter them and where the grad students and others attending might well have been tempted to believe them. Although no one likes to be lied about, including me, there is a larger issue here: By trying to discredit a reporter who is exposing misconduct, and who for the past five years has helped victims and survivors of abuse find their voices, attacking me is a subtle way of siding with the predators and enabling them. I want to be brief, but here are the main lies that were told:

1. Willeke Wendrich stated beginning at 3:07 pm that I come up with "ridiculous allegations," asked her to respond to them, and then didn't use her answers. This is a lie. As much as I could get Wendrich to say to me, I published on the blog posts. It is true, as she said, that at one point I said she was lying about what she knew; I stand on my previous reporting about why I think that.

2. Jason de Leon beginning at 3:09 pm accused me of lying or misrepresenting things. He stated, correctly, that I asked him to talk to me about the situation; I thought he might do so because he played a good role during the debacle last year when the Society for American Archaeology allowed a known sexual predator to attend the meeting in the presence of his victims. (It's disappointing that some supposed #MeToo advocates lose their commitment as soon as the allegations hit closer to home.) However, de Leon went on to say at the meeting that I had trolled him on Facebook and Twitter (false) and that I was one of the "anonymous" commenters on my own blog (a complete lie, although there are a lot of comments.)

3. Jason de Leon stated that I "tried to sell" the stories of victims "to the New Yorker behind their backs." This is one of the most egregious lies of all. It is true that I talked to The New Yorker for several months about my investigation into paleoanthropologist David Lordkipanidze of Dmanisi fame, one of the worst sexual predators out there; that was done with the knowledge and permission of the two sexual assault victims that story concerned.

Similar comments, by both de Leon and Wendrich, included accusations that I posted anonymously on my own blog (again, a lie) and that I pressured victims and survivors to talk to me and be part of my stories. In the case of the Kurin and IFR stories, that is just laughable, as nearly all of my sources were students and staff who came to me and asked for help telling their stories. This has been the case for most of my reporting, especially the past few years, as I have gained a reputation for doing this kind of journalism.

As part of the attempts to discredit my reporting--which, in essence, is an attempt to discredit the experiences of the survivors by shooting the messenger--Boytner and IFR leaders continually referred to me as "a blogger" or "the blogger," as if the way investigations are published somehow reflects on their quality and thoroughness. I dealt with this issue in a piece last year in the Columbia Journalism Review, which I recommend. Blogger or no, I use the same rigorous reporting methods I learned over more than 40 years of doing journalism, including 25 years at Science magazine.

I hope that my reporting on the failure of the institutions mentioned here, along with this inside look at the thinking that leads to these failures, will encourage young researchers and their true advocates (and not just the fair weather friends) to keep up the fight for a more equitable environment in academia and the sciences, one free of abuses of power and all the evils they bring.)


June 13: Additional thoughts on Title IX, Connecticut College, and the role of journalism

I'm very gratified at the attention that this and earlier blog posts about misconduct in archaeology have received. My update on the Danielle Kurin Title IX case has generated some 12,000 page views, since this report was posted there have been more than 9000 additional page views as of Monday the 15th (not too bad for a "rinky-dinky Website," as Jason de Leon called it during the June 11 Town Hall.)

Since the Town Hall lasted nearly two hours and covered a lot of topics, I was only able to give a fairly succinct account above. One question that did come up, however, was whether IFR was covered by Title IX. The answer, supplied by Willeke Wendrich, was no--as a private institution it was not. Wendrich did say, however, that IFR had its own internal anti-harassment policies and that it could do its own investigations, as it did in the case of Danielle Kurin's 2018 field school. However, despite Wendrich's statement that IFR publicly cut ties with Kurin afterwards, I have not been able to find any evidence of such public statements. And when I repeatedly asked Wendrich to point me to them, she did not respond. My conclusion is that this is at least partly a falsehood, and that anything IFR communicated to the archaeological community was done through the typical "whisper network" (if I am wrong, Wendrich and other IFR leaders are free to correct me in a comment on this post.)

(Re the "whisper network," to quote University of Pennsylvania PhD student Sam Seyler on Facebook:)

"The whisper network in anthropology, while designed to protect victims, continues to protect the abusers."


At other times during the meeting, Wendrich suggested that legal considerations would prevent IFR from saying much about misconduct by anyone associated with the institute; that leaves questions about whether fear of litigation would lead IFR to "pass the harasser," as it in effect did with Kurin (twice.)

However, students participating in IFR field schools receive academic credit for their work, which raises another question: Are the accrediting institutions liable under Title IX for what goes on in the field schools? As of today, universities and colleges are responsible under Title IX for abuses that take place outside the USA, although new Trump administration rules are poised to come into effect on August 14 that would restrict Title IX jurisdiction to within the US. (Those rules changes are likely to be challenged in court, and at any rate were obviously not in effect during any of the episodes described in this and my earlier blog posts.)

 At the Town Hall, beginning at 2:14 pm, Wendrich told the group that IFR had gone back and forth between being accredited by UCLA Extension and Connecticut College, a private liberal arts school in New London. Wendrich said that Ran Boytner preferred UCLA Extension because he "thought it was better marketing." But Wendrich says she was "not happy" with that and since 2018 IFR has been back with Connecticut College.

Why Connecticut College? I have not had a chance to look into this, but perhaps someone out there reading this blog knows the answer, or could suggest hypotheses. I don't want to speculate, but these days the imagination can run wild... more on this later.
Breaking: I see someone has now weighed in on this in the Comments section. Take a look. In earlier posts I have suggested that a thorough, independent, outside audit of IFR's finances is long overdue.

Finally I just wanted to say one more thing about the role of journalism in ferreting out abuses in academia and other walks of life. Not in a million years would Wendrich, de Leon, or other IFR leaders admit that the reporting of a journalist had anything to do with Ran Boytner being terminated as executive director of the organization he helped to found and through which he found his personal identity (and his power to harass and bully others.) And yet the brave survivors of abuse who turned to a journalist because they could not get heard any other way would no doubt credit the power of exposure and publicity with this important result--as would any other honest observer.

I will close with my favorite quote about journalism, by the great Czech writer Milan Kundera:

"The power of the journalist is not based on the right to pose a question, but on the right to demand a response." 


Update June 14: Ran Boytner's animal cruelty?

A colleague writes:

"You can add animal abuse to the list of Ran Boytner’s transgressions. In 2015, I attended an IFR field school in Chincha Peru, and witnessed him grab a pregnant cat by the tail and sling her out the gate of our compound. Never before had I witnessed such disgusting behavior toward an animal. I did report this to [Charles] Stanish upon return to the US (Stanish had already departed Peru at the time of the incident.) He seemed disgusted, though not particularly surprised. I let it go, content that I’d never have to work alongside Boytner again, but happening across your blog post, felt compelled to speak up.

"She was a stray, but Charles Stanish had allowed her in, and she was loved by (most) of the students. Ran was of the opinion she shouldn’t be there. But that’s not how you handle an animal, especially a pregnant one. Who grabs an animal by the tail and throws it? I cried for hours. It was horrifying."


The cat that Boytner abused.

(In the minutes after I posted this, two colleagues wrote in. One was at the field school when Boytner threw the cat and corroborated that story; another pointed out that he hated animals in general.)




Update June 20, 2020: Danielle Kurin's misconduct cost UCLA Extension more than $40,000


I reported earlier that two days after the University of California, Santa Barbara concluded that Peruvian archaeologist Enmanuel Gomez Choque had sexually harassed students during a 2015 field school and that his partner Danielle Kurin had retaliated against students who reported it, IFR and UCLA Extension cancelled Kurin's 2016 field school for "health and safety" reasons. Documents just released to me by UCLA, pursuant to a California Public Records Act request, indicate that UCLA Extension paid $43,256.48 to IFR for reimbursement of expenses the students and the institute had incurred.

Some of the students were already in Peru, and all had paid the tuition for the field school and bought airline tickets. Although IFR was able to transfer some of the students to other field schools, a number asked for full refunds and many of the airline tickets were nonrefundable.

It took several dunning letters from Boytner to get UCLA Extension to pay up, however. Boytner first sent an invoice to UCLA on August 11, 2016, but by October IFR had not received the funds.

"We did all the hard work," Boytner wrote to then UCLA Extension academic dean (and now IFR board member) Kevin Vaughn and other UCLA officials on October 15, "dealing with upset students and parents over the Peru-Sondor program and shielded [university extension] from the consequences of a decision we had no part in making. It is now time for you to do the right thing and send the check to IFR as soon as possible." Boytner added that IFR was very short of funds and needed the money to meet its October payroll.

This final letter seems to have worked. The documents indicate that a check for the full amount was sent to IFR on October 24, 2016.

I have reported that Kevin Vaughn knew about the Title IX findings against Kurin and Gomez at the time they were handed down, and that Boytner also knew. Nevertheless, Boytner falsely told colleagues then and later that Kurin had been exonerated.


Update June 25: The following detailed commentary about the Town Hall has been circulating around the UCLA archaeological community and beyond. While I have not had time to fact check every detail myself, it does seem to be a valuable addition to the conversation, so I am pasting it here.

One issue I am particularly interested in from the standpoint of the defamation suit Kurin has filed against me: Kurin stated in the complaint that IFR had dissociated itself from her "without prejudice," as if they had found only her partner Gomez and not her to have committed misconduct. Ran Boytner's previous on the record statements and the statements of board members referred to below flatly contradiction that assertion, and make clear that Kurin's own misconduct was a major factor in the decision. IFR permanently severed ties with her.



In the aftermath of the June 11 Town Hall meeting, below are comments, fact-checks, and additional questions raised in response to the statements and claims made by some of the speakers. The purpose of this commentary is to encourage a more transparent and retaliation-free trialogue between the Cotsen community, UCLA, and the IFR. Feel free to share and circulate.

[11:55] Wendrich: “I used to be Chair [of the IFR] around 2013, but I stepped down when I became director of the Cotsen because I thought those two roles didn’t sit so well.”
  • Fact-check: According to her online CV, Wendrich was Chair of the IFR for five years, between 2012-2017. She became director of the Cotsen in 2016. In September 2017 she was replaced at the IFR by real estate developer Yuval Bar Zemer, whom she refers to in the meeting as “a great donor to the IFR.” According to Internet Archive and IFR public tax records, the very same month that Wendrich passed that position to Bar Zemer, he loaned (not donated) $100,000 to the IFR. This topic was covered in more detail by the commentators in Balter’s blog.

[18:33] Wendrich: “The Institute for Field Research started at UCLA, and I was not at all involved at that point.” She repeats this again later in the meeting.
  •  Fact-check: As many at the Cotsen Institute well know, Wendrich ran several seasons of her field school at Egypt through the program that Boytner established at UCLA (http://www.archbase.com/fayum/). She later ran the same field school through the IFR. As she further acknowledges, her husband Hans Barnard was on the committee that vetted the programs for the Cotsen. Sources reports that the two were, and may continue to be, very close friends with Boytner. It therefore surprised no one when Wendrich became a founding member of the IFR in 2011 and the first Chair of the IFR Board in 2012.

[19:03] Wendrich: “We all know that field school in the past, and even nowadays, are sometimes kind of almost student slavery. Students are put in the trench to dig, but they don’t really get any education.”
  • Comment: Several people who attended the meeting felt that Wendrich’s use of the word “slavery” in such a context was extremely insensitive, especially in this day and age.

[24:51] [31:05] Somewhat contradictory comments, between Wendrich who stated: “UCLA graduate students who go with a UCLA faculty member to the field, don’t pay for a field school”, and Hans Barnard who stated: “In some field schools we ask graduate students, or we have asked graduate students, to contribute towards housing and food and stuff.”

[25:31] Wendrich: “We don’t have any field schools run by graduate students. You have to have a PhD at least… only established scholars or scholars who don’t need to subsist on the field school funds are accepted as field school directors.”
  • Fact-check: Both Wendrich’s field school in Ethiopia and Chip’s field school in Peru were co-directed by their Cotsen graduate students, and promoted as such on the IFR website. The graduate students at Chip’s field school were often left to run the field school on their own.
  • Last year all IFR field schools that were directed or co-directed by Cotsen affiliates and former UCLA graduate students in Ethiopia, Italy, China, and India, were closely tied to Wendrich.

[22:40] Wendrich, contradicted herself when asked about the role of IFR in her Cotsen-based project “[In Ethiopia] I work with students from four different universities, and with faculty from four different Ethiopian universities. I could never afford that if I wouldn’t have this extra funding.” But then- [27:25] “I basically run my fieldwork from my endowed Chair. And in the case of the Ethiopia field school, the only reason that I run a field school, apart from thinking that it’s a really good principle to allow students to learn things in the field, is that it allows me to involve the Ethiopian students. So I could run my project without IFR, but then I couldn’t have that pedagogical part of it.”
  • Questions: Does this means that Ethiopian students are paying for the program? If so, are they paying full tuition? If not, why do you need the IFR to involve them? Can’t students from the host country participate even if it is not a US-based field school?

[28:55] Wendrich: “Ran Boytner had a salary paid from the income from those field schools. So he was kind of a freelancer at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology.”
  • Fact-check: Ran Boytner was a Research Associate at the Cotsen Institute since 1998. Starting in 2007, Boytner became an employee at the Cotsen with the official title of “Director for International Research.” This position came with an office, resources and supports, access to students and volunteers, and a fixed annual salary with full UCLA benefits (some report an annual pay of at least $60,000 in 2010.)

[35:27] Wendrich: “There was an [IFR] office… in March we had to give that up”.
  • The IFR address was updated on their website only on June 11, immediately after a visitor (a student?) went to visit the posted address and reported on Balter’s blog that they found it empty. The fact that the offices had been evacuated was also not communicated to the IFR field school directors.

[35:34] Wendrich: “Very early on, we canceled all our summer 2020 field schools because it was just irresponsible to even think about sending people in the field.”
  • Fact-check: prospective IFR students, including at UCLA, report that although the IFR promised to cancel the programs when State Department Level IV travel warning will be issued, it took them a week after this issuance to declare cancellation on March 25. At this point, summer programs across campus had cancelled their programs in early to mid-March, so it was definitely not “very early on.” Reports were also logged of students who were ignored their demands for tuition refund at least 6 or 7 weeks after the cancellation date. This topic was covered by several complaints made by commentators on Balter’s blog.

[35:45] Wendrich: “The moment we canceled all the field schools, we looked at the financial situation and it was clear that we had to give up the office, which we did, lay off the personnel. And from that moment on the board of governors… stepped in in the role of the executive director and managed everything.”
  • Fact-check: All IFR staff members were removed from the IFR website in April, with the exception of Ran Boytner who was still listed there up to May 4th. According to IFR field school directors, on April 24th they received a letter from the board (backdated to April 11th), in which Boytner is also listed as a board of governors’ member. This indicates that Boytner was not laid off in April-May, but was actually promoted.

[38:04] Wendrich: “The [board] chair was Yuval Bar Zemer, a real estate developer, and a great donor to IFR.”
  • The public IFR tax records show that Bar Zemer loaned (not donated) $100,000 to the IFR in September 2017, the same month he took over the board chair position from Wendrich. The same tax records show that majority of the loan has yet to be paid. A commentator on the blog also adds this important point: “Not sure about NPO rules & regulations on having a major (and only?) financier also filling the chairperson position, but it definitely raises ethical questions as to the timing of the appointment and what interests are guiding the organization.”

[44:40] Wendrich: “Connecticut College offered to provide credit… I thought Connecticut College did an amazing job, and we had a very good relationship.”
  • As a commentator on Balter’s blog specifies: “I was involved as staff on an IFR field school in 2014. During that field school, I spoke about project finances with Anthony Graesch, who was involved with the founding of IFR and continues to serve in IFR leadership. Graesch got his PhD at UCLA, and was then a postdoc at UCLA until he became faculty at Connecticut College in 2010.
    Graesch told me at that field school that Connecticut College was chosen to manage credits for students, because the College cut a special discounted tuition rate for IFR via Graesch. I understood this to mean that IFR was able to pocket a greater amount of the fees charged to students; the students' overall fees did not appear to be lower after the switch to the College's cheaper tuition (compared to CSUN or UCLA). Students were not presented with a breakdown of how their fees were spent.”
  • Question: It was demonstrated that many of the IFR board members were or are UCLA employees and/or graduates, including Willeke Wendrich, Jason de Leon, Lynn Swartz Dodd, Anthony Graesch, Rowan Flad, Kevin Vaughn, and Chip Stanish (and maybe others.) Some of these board members coincided with Boytner at graduate school and when he served as the Director of International Research. Considering these close ties, can the board be considered an impartial and objective party when evaluating the actions of the IFR executive director?   

[49:50] Willeke: “[Danielle Kurin] was briefly a member of the board in 2017, and she volunteered for the sexual harassment committee. After IFR found out of the problem in the field school in 2018, we severed all ties with Danielle Kurin.”
  • Fact check: According to the Internet Archive (WayBack Machine), Danielle Kurin was an active IFR board member for two years and eight months, between February 2016 and October 2018. This means she was still listed as an IFR board member at least three months after the incidents at her 2018 field school. This is covered in more detail by commentators in Balter’s blog, with the added observation “Both Willeke and Jason were board members together with Kurin, so it is out of the question that they simply forgot when, and how long, she had served alongside them. Whether they will admit it or not, Kurin was serving on the IFR board and the IFR sexual harassment committee while she herself was under an active Title IX investigation.”

[57:15] Ernestine Elster asked: “I want to know if IFR publishes a financial statement at the end of each year, if indeed it is a 501-C3 organization. And who owns it?”.
  • These important questions were not addressed by the IFR representatives in the meeting.

[1:06:06-1:09:48] Wendrich and De Leon refer to Michael Balter and his blog with the following words: “ridiculous allegations”; “uses a lot of heresy, which he presents as facts”; “he is known to anonymously comment on his own blog with incendiary remarks”; “he always will provide the most negative interpretation of intentions, purposes, and objectives”; “either lying, or misrepresenting what has been said”; “aggressive and incredibly questionable tactics”; “much of what he has about the IFR is an outright lie.”
  • Comment: the IFR representatives condemn Balter’s reporting, but other than blanket statements of denial fail to present any new evidence that contradicts any or all allegations against them. Since Balter supports his allegations with official documents, students’ testimonials, employees’ testimonials, and numerous comments from the public (including one from a former IFR board member), by dismissing Balter as a liar and not even investigating whether the above represent valid concerns, the IFR board further dismisses all those victims as liars without any due diligence.
[1:09:48] De Leon: “[Balter] keeps insisting that all of us at IFR knew that Danielle Kurin had a Title IX allegation against her. We did not know that. We knew that she had been put on leave. She described that to the IFR board, to all of us, as something related to how a student had filed a complaint against her husband in the field, and she described the student as incredibly racist. And that was the extent of our knowledge of what was going on. When the field school ran again in 2018, and then for the first time IFR received notice of what had been going on, we conducted a very thorough investigation and found that, you know, that bad things had happened and that she should not be near students at all, and we immediately cut ties with her. But that was the first time that any of us on IFR board had any inkling that that stuff was going on. Had we known, and Balter had repeatedly accused IFR of covering up for Danielle Kurin, but there will be literally no reason for us to do that, because it just will make us look worse than ever… I find it very very offensive, especially as someone who was directly involved in the investigation process, that he would come out and question all of our integrity about this whole process. We reacted as quickly as we could, with the limited information we had at the time. And I will stand by that.”
  • Fact-check and question: In his blog Balter suggests that some, not necessarily all, IFR board members knew about Kurin’s and Gomez’s Title IX investigations and findings. This is also further supported by Ran Boytner’s email published on the blog, and who suggest that at least Kevin Vaughn knew. In turn, it is suggested that this, or these, board member(s) may have failed to report to the others. Would De Leon be willing to consider this as a possibility of why he was unaware of these allegations?
  • Questions: What does it say about the IFR board, almost all tenured professors with years of experience in academia, that they would readily believe that a faculty member in the UC system would be placed on a three-year administrative leave because a racist student filed a complaint against her husband? If the IFR is so thorough with its vetting of programs and scholars, how did they let such an individual become a member of the academic board, a member of the sexual harassment committee, and a director for several IFR field school without even looking into this? Aren’t they exhibiting the same dismissive attitude now, when denying the additional allegations raised by Balter? 
  • Question: Once the IFR board realized that Kurin “should not be near students at all,” did they alert students, faculty, and administrators at UCLA, UCSB, or elsewhere? Were de Leon and Wendrich aware that she was invited to give a Pizza talk at the Cotsen in the Fall?
  • What makes De Leon, or any other members of the IFR board, qualified to investigate cases of sexual harassment in the field? Do they have proper training? Would it not be it a conflict of interest to investigate a fellow board member?

[1:12:08] De Leon: “[Balter] controls his little rinky-dinky website.”
  • Comment: As someone deeply involved in the #MeToo movement and knows well that the voice of survivors, victims, and whistleblowers is often suppressed and relegated to these informal channels, describing Balter’s website as “rinky-dinky” is extremely condescending on De Leon’s part. Not everyone has a MacArthur grant funds to build a professional website and hire a team of employees and student volunteers to run it.

[1:12:20] De Leon: “Which is why I have refused to engage with him in any way, shape, or form.”
  • Comment: You also refused to engage with the IFR field school directors in any way, shape, or form, although they requested clarifications from you and other board members on multiple occasions. These PIs complained that the board silence is damaging their reputation by association, as they are getting increased pressure from their respective administrations to explain why they are still affiliated with the IFR.

[1:18:42] Wendrich: “IFR is a non-profit 501(c)(3), and it does not operate under Title IX obligations. We do have a very strict policy, and actually we are also not bound by direct relations that Title IX office at the UC system is bound by. So we can stop our collaboration with someone if we think that a line has been crossed. If we find, however, that there is a Title IX complaint of a student, for student, against someone in a field school situation, we always report that to the Title IX office of the student’s [university or college] in question.”
  • Comment and question: Wendrich’s explanation, immediately following Mr. Cato’s clarification that starting August 14 Title IX will no longer have jurisdiction on cases that happen outside the U.S., reveal that students in future IFR field schools will be even more vulnerable to harassment. How does the IFR plans to avoid cases like that of the student who was attacked in Kurin’s 2018 field school and is now being denied justice from UCSB, to repeat again? Now that UCSB has thrown the ball back to IFR’s court, will IFR help that former student?
  • Question: How does the fact that the IFR does not need to comply with Title IX conforms with the statement that those measures “were designed to protect students from those in positions that are more powerful, to protect women and men from those who are more likely to be believed.” (Willeke Wendrich, 6 May 2020, Director’s Message on CIoA website.)

[1:20:52] In reply to the graduate students’ question whether Danielle Kurin ran an IFR field school even after members of the IFR board became aware of a previous Title IX violations against Kurin, Wendrich replied “Absolutely not. That’s ridiculous.”
  • The same comments and questions asked above of De Leon on this topic, also apply here to Wendrich.
[1:21:13] Wendrich, when asked about the cases of sexual misconduct and retaliation against students in Kurin’s IFR field school in 2018: “This is a difficult situation, because our first concern is always the interest of the students. I can say, and that’s one of reasons that I’m really angry with Balter, because he abuses the victims by keeping after them and getting the story out of them. As Jason said, we have conducted an investigation… we interviewed all the TAs, all the people around this situation, and I can’t say anything more about that except that we immediately cut all ties with Danielle Kurin.”
  • Fact check and question: Danielle Kurin remained listed as an IFR board member until October 2018, about three months after the field school in Peru concluded. The email to the students that she is no longer affiliated with the IFR was sent on October 17. Why did it take them so long to cut ties with her?
  • Questions: Is there truth to the student’s testimonial in Balter’s blog that IFR did not interview her and others more than two months after the events? Were the IFR students satisfied with the results of the investigation? If so, why are they still communicating with Title IX offices and journalists? 
  • Questions: How does Willeke know that Balter abuses the victims? Did any of those victims complained to her? Did the IFR reach out to any of these former students who shared their story on Balter’s blog?

[1:22:30] Wendrich, when asked about taking a public stance in Danielle Kurin’s removal from the board: “You have to understand that a nonprofit like IFR will open it up to litigation if we are… too explicit about some things. There are privacy matters and we need to take those into account.”
  • Question and comment: What about the IFR obligation to inform the archaeological community about a scholar who presents a danger to students’ safety? How many other field school directors the IFR cut ties with for similar reasons, and that community is unaware of? 

[1:23:10] De Leon: “I will add that I did at one point go to Ran, once I knew about the things that happened with Danielle Kurin, I went to Ran and said, you going to have to do something about this, this is not an issue that’s going to go away, and Ran didn’t, he basically circulated that information to the rest of the board but took, made no public stance on this. So there was a conversation that we had with the DD, and was one that he didn’t take seriously at the time.”
  • Comment and question: If De Leon was so concerned at the time and saw that Boytner was not taking this seriously, why didn’t he act himself? Wendrich explained that the IFR board is responsible for the conduct of the director. Was Boytner disciplined for not taking action as advised at the time?

[1:24:05] Wendrich, when asked about Ran Boytner’s sexist, racist, and bullying behaviours in many capacities during his tenure as founding member of the IFR, including sexual harassment in the field and the workplace: “There are things that we cannot talk about. Or things that I have not heard about. Even though I’ve heard rumours that there was an investigation. Let it be said that there was a breach of trust between the board of directors, or the board of governors, and the executive director. So we terminated our relationship with founding director of the IFR. Ran Boytner is no longer the executive director. And this relates to personnel matters, and as I said we are opening ourselves up to litigation if I say more.”
  • Questions: As a board of governor member, why have you only heard a rumour about an investigation into the behaviour of the executive director? Who conducts these investigations? If the board, are they qualified and impartial?
  • Question: Similar to the Kurin case, if indeed there is truth to these serious allegations and contact with Boytner jeopardize people’s safety, shouldn’t the community deserve to know regardless of the litigation risk to the IFR?

[1:25:22] Wendrich, on why the IFR took no public stance on the allegations in Balter’s blog: “This all happened while COVID hit, while we had to cancel all the field schools, while we had to lay off the personnel, get rid of the office, empty the office. IFR board has been keenly focused on its first priority, and that is the interest of our enrolled students who can’t go to the field this summer.”
  • Fact check and comment: Balter first blog where IFR was mentioned was published on February 28. The field schools were canceled on March 25. The Town hall meeting took place on June 11. Wendrich expect us to believe that in those 16 weeks, the Board was simply too busy to make a statement regarding the serious allegations against their organization? If the interest of their enrolled students was indeed their primarily concern, clearing their name and putting their stakeholders at ease would have been a priority. Additionally many students were waiting over 6 weeks to even hear back from the IFR about their tuition refund, so obviously this was not your first priority.

[1:25:43] Wendrich “Upon the cancellation of the field schools, we have been making provisions for these students. We organized a six week online master class, so that these students, if they need credit, can get the credit to finish their studies.”
  • Fact check: There is no information on the IFR website on who gives the credits to this online master class. It is not listed on the Connecticut College class schedule for Summer 2020.

[1:26:15] Wendrich “The board is of course aware that there are these inflammatory allegations… You really don’t want to give credit to something that has so little credit.”
  • Question: Did the IFR conduct an investigation to check if there is no credit to the events and first-hand testimonials that Balter cites in his blog? If they had no doubt that none of these have credit, why wait 16 weeks before saying it?

[1:27:05] Wendrich, when asked if Ran Boytner will be allowed to participate in Cotsen events in person or remotely: “Ran Boytner is an alum of UCLA. He has not been accused of wreaking havoc at the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology. He is a colleague. If we have public lectures, then I have no reason to go and tell him that he is not allowed in. If someone wants to prevent from him from coming in, they have to make a complaint that will have to be decided on whether there is a reason to deny him access.”
  • Comment: On the one hand Wendrich refuses to comment on the numerous allegations against Boytner improprieties in the field and in the workplace, but on the other places the responsibility of finding “reasons” to deny him access on her concerned community. Thankfully, Mr. Cato took a firmer stance and assured the audience that there are formal channels to deny campus access to anyone who potentially poses a safety risk to the community.  

[1:32:04] Wendrich, when asked about whether she knew about IFR employees who complained about Boytner’s bullying and harassment: “I cannot go into detail. At some point, Ran Boytner asked me to come to the office, because one of the personnel members said she did not feel safe. And I had a conversation. My conclusion was that this was really a matter of personal style. Ran Boytner has an aggressive way of addressing people. And if you know him, you know that it’s pretty innocent. But if you don’t know him so well, it can be conceived as being threatening. So I mediated in that case. The board did part with him. And let say that human relations is not his forte... [1:34:31] “As far as complaints about bullying and racism, I think this is mostly based on a misunderstanding. It’s a complaint of one particular personnel member. And other than that I really cannot go into this.”
  • Fact check and question: In this email posted on Blater’s blog, Ran Boytner claimed that there was a formal investigation into this complaint with an ad-hoc committee of three board members and an HR specialist. Wendrich, on the other hand, states “At some point, Ran Boytner asked me to come to the office, because one of the personnel members said she did not feel safe. And I had a conversation. My conclusion was that this was really a matter of personal style.” Who is correct here?
  • Questions: If the IFR employee made a complaint about sexual harassment, bullying, and retaliation against Boytner, what made Wendrich qualified to investigate such critical matters? As a board member and colleague (and friend?) of Boytner, isn’t she biased? Why doesn’t she believe the employee’s story now, when she reported it on Balter’s blog?
  • Questions: Is it true that Wendrich recommended to use a “safeword” in the office? Is it true that this employee was fired 10 days after Wendrich submitted her report on the incident? 
  • Fact-check and comments: The Cotsen community is well aware of Ran Boytner’s bullying behavior towards faculty, students, staff, and employees, ever since he was affiliated with the Institute as the Director of International Research. Moderator Lesure comment pushed it back to 1996 when Boytner was a TA in his class, but there are certainly other numerous reports which Wendrich was informed about in and outside the IFR. Former IFR board member Jade d'Alpoim Guedes wrote in a comment on Blater’s blog “I also quit because of what I learned about how IFR staff were treated.”
  • By trying to dismiss this as a “misunderstanding” involving one employee, Wendrich is clearly siding with, and continuing to enable, a known bully and abuser.

[1:34:15] Wendrich, when asked whether she can comment on Boytner’s sexual harassment case at UCLA: “I can’t say anything about what happened at UCLA. Although the blog has published a lot of things about that. And if I read that then this is not sexual harassment.”
  • Comment and question: It seems that Wendrich suddenly considers here the Blog as a reliable source of information. Regarding the last sentence, if the UCLA documents that Balter quotes are authentic, then at best this is a case of a professor who, while in a remote UCLA field school in a foreign country, reveals to his student that he loves her and discusses matters of a very personal nature, all against her will. At worst he solicits sexual favors, stalks her, and grabs her. In both scenarios, the student evidently rejects his advances up to a point where she has to leave the program. One way or the other, this falls under UCLA’s definitions and policy of sexual harassment: https://policy.ucop.edu/doc/4000385/SVSH
  • Can Wendrich clarify why she does not consider Boytner’s behavior in his field school as sexual harassment? This may clarify why she also dismissed the IFR employee’s story.
  • Wendrich also fails to comment on how Boytner was able to keep his position in the Cotsen Institute for over a year after the events, even though former director Charles Stanish prohibited him in writing to engage with undergraduate students without a third party present.

[1:35:11] De Leon: “I would just add, that the allegations against Ran Boytner, about things that have happened at UCLA, as a Board member, I was unaware of any of those things until reading that actual Blog post. I had no knowledge of any of the things that happened at UCLA until Balter published that piece about Ran Boytner. Many if not all of our Board members, except for those who cannot speak legally, were also unaware of those things.”
  • Comment: De Leon takes a contradictory stance to his earlier statements on the credibility of Balter, by actually crediting the blog for revealing to him and the other board members the allegations against Boytner. De Leon further acknowledges that there are IFR board members who due to legal restrictions, are still not able to comment about Boytner’s case from 2009.
  • Questions: If certain board members knew about Boytner’s case at UCLA (and Chip certainly knew), how do they justify aiding him in establishing, and then joining, a global organization that is responsible for thousands of students in the field?  

[1:35:45] Moderator Richard Lesure: “Maybe I should set aside my moderator role for a moment, and say that all of my contacts in 25 years at UCLA, my only contacts with the Ombuds office, have been over Ran Boytner. He was the worst TA I ever had. And he was bullying a student, a female student, and we worked it out back in 1996, it was a long time ago, we worked it out with the Ombuds office, who was incredibly helpful in making me realize what a bully Ran was. And then his pattern of bullying behavior towards me since then has resulted in me actually not speaking to him for the last 20 years. Someone needs to say a little bit of the other side of Ran Boytner.”
[1:36:50] Wendrich: “WHICH OTHER SIDE?”
  • Comment: Thank you Richard! Many who attended the meeting agree here that Wendrich’s retort to Lesure’s heartfelt comment was absolutely appalling.

[1:36:56] Wendrich: “As said. The board has severed ties.”

[1:38:00] Wendrich, when asked if Ran Boytner will be banned from campus since Charles Stanish prohibited him from interacting with undergraduate students without a third party present, and whether this letter can be shared: “I don’t think so. This falls under the Title IX case that apparently was against him.”
  • Comment: If this poses a risk to her community, can she as current director of the Cotsen Institute ask to see the letter of her predecessor? Wouldn’t the Cotsen have a copy of the file?

[1:39:37] Wendrich “IFR is actually mo… at least as strict as UCLA in its anti-harassment and discrimination policy. And there is a very strong policy in place, where the Title IX offices will be involved for students who are involved in situations like that.”
  • Comment: see above regarding IFR, UCSB, and the new Title IX regulations.

[1:42:05] Wendrich: “Of all the field schools, the 61 field schools who are offered in 2020, 60 will continue and will be offered in 2021, if everything goes well.”
  • Fact-check: A quick survey among some faculty members shows that, at this point, this is a very optimistic assessment by Wendrich that does not accurately reflect the wishes of the current IFR field school directors.
  • Comment: Wendrich spoke personally with the field school directors several weeks after the IFR promised the students that the majority of the field schools will be offered in 2021. In those conversations, she reported to some that Boytner is no affiliated with the IFR, but was very vague on the details. The PIs are still waiting for a formal statement.   

[1:42:20] Wendrich: “We are providing content for students over the summer, and make sure that if they need the credits, they can get them.”
  • See comment above regarding Connecticut College.

[1:42:41] Wendrich: “We will need to communicate something, even though I’m very hesitant to react to anything that comes out of the Balter blog.”
  • See the many comments above regarding damages caused to the community by continuing to keep silent.

[1:43:47] Wendrich: “The [IFR] model is extremely important. And that’s why I put all this work into this organization now. That is why I go through all these miserable allegations. And I can tell you, I am not a happy person… It’s a very aware and very ethical organization.”
  • See the many comments above.


Update July 14, 2020: More details on the lawsuit against Ran Boytner and UCLA.
(Note: The paragraphs below have been slightly modified from the update posted here July 13 and a few additional details added.)

As I reported earlier, in 2009 former IFR executive director Ran Boytner was subject to a Title IX investigation for allegedly sexually harassing and assaulting a student at his field school in Peru. Although UCLA found him technically not guilty of harassment, he was admonished by the director of UCLA's Cotsen Institute of Archaeology, Charles Stanish, for his conduct, and told that he could not have unsupervised contact with students. I also reported that the victim in this case later sued Boytner and UCLA (apparently because she was dissatisfied with UCLA letting him off the hook) and that the case was eventually settled.

I now have a few more details about this case, which was filed in the California Superior Court in early 2011. The victim's complaint was based on four allegations: Battery, sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence. 

The negligence allegation was directed at UCLA. The plaintiff argued that the university failed to protect her from Boytner, but UC countered that it had no information about any previous misconduct by Boytner and thus could not be held responsible. The university tried to get a quick summary judgement in the case, but was apparently unsuccessful. Then, on April 28, 2011, the case was officially settled. I cannot at this time determine how much money the victim got in the settlement, other than to say it was substantial. The majority was paid by the University of California, and a much smaller amount by Boytner himself. The fact that there was a settlement, and the terms of the settlement, were supposed to remain confidential.

The important point here is that despite Boytner's claims that the university did not find him guilty of sexual harassment (technically true, although his conduct was so egregious that were it today there is little doubt that the outcome would have been different), he and the university were forced to pay compensation to the victim.

The question remains what the board of governors of the Institute for Field Research knew about both the 2009 Title IX and the 2011 monetary settlement. The Institute for Field Research, with Boytner as its founding executive director, was established in March 2011, according to the origins story on its Web site--the month before the case was formally settled. (After Boytner was terminated, this origins story was altered to remove all mention of him.)

Perhaps someone might ask IFR leaders, especially Willeke Wendrich, what they knew and when they knew it.


Update July 16: Has Ran Boytner really been terminated as executive director of IFR or not? Today I  wrote to him and several IFR board members in connection with the defamation suit Danielle Kurin has filed against me, instructing them to preserve all their records for the case as is usual in such litigation. Here is the auto response I received from Boytner:


Ran Boytner

9:41 AM (2 minutes ago)
to me
The Institute for Field Research has received your email. We will respond to you as soon as possible. As you might imagine, like you, we are working in dramatically changed circumstances due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

We appreciate your patience.

Thank you. 




--
Ran Boytner, RPA
Institute for Field Research
2999 Overland Ave. #103
Los Angeles CA. 90064
Toll Free: (877) 839-4374 Ext. 101
Direct: +1 (424) 209-1173 

https://www.instagram.com/ifrarchaeology/        
The IFR is a supporter of the Registrar of Professional Archaeologists



Update July 28, 2020: Ran Boytner forms new, broader field school organization. Will it be a rival to IFR?

Ran Boytner, who from the evidence above appears to have departed from the Institute for Field Research on bad terms, is now organizing a new field school apparatus. The new organization is called, tentatively, the Field Science Foundation or the Field Science Training Foundation (Boytner has used both names in materials he has prepared that are designed to attract field school directors.)

In a working document Boytner has been circulating to colleagues, Boytner says that the Foundation was established on June 16 "to provide comprehensive field training for students across all academic field disciplines." (Meaning that it will reach far beyond archaeology and into fields as diverse as paleontology and geology.)

The plans for the new organization seem fairly far along, so much so that the Foundation has already hired an executive director, Giulia Saltini Semerari, a classical archaeologist who is currently at the University of Michigan's Museum of Anthropological Archaeology. In an email to numerous colleagues and prospective field school directors (some of whom he is trying to lure away from IFR) Boytner writes:


"Dear Colleague,
I am delighted to share with you that Dr. Giulia Saltini Semerari accepted the position of Executive Director at the Field Science Training Foundation (temporary name). Giulia is a Mediterranean archaeologist working on Late Bronze, Early Iron Age and the Archaic Mediterranean, with a special focus on southern Italy and Greece. Giulia earned her BA in 2004 from the Università degli Studi di Siena (Italy) and PhD in 2010 from the University of Oxford. Between 2012-14, Giulia was a Marie Curie Intra-European Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the VU University Amsterdam (Netherlands), and, in 2014-18 she was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen (Germany). Giulia is presently a Research Affiliate at the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology, and Adjunct Faculty of Anthropology at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. She is also the co-director of the Incoronata Project (Southern Italy) and the director of the field school there. Giulia already published almost 20 articles and book chapters in peer review venues and presented over two dozen papers in professional conferences. I believe Giulia is destined to make a significant mark on archaeology and I am humble that she chose to direct her considerable energies into building the FSTF.  
Giulia will begin her official FSTF duties on January 1, 2021. Meanwhile, we are thinking about structure, procedure and policies for the organization. One of the first items on Giulia’s agenda is to visit with you – so she may learn more about your project and its unique setting and needs. The visit will also allow you to meet Giulia both as a colleague and a person. We plan to set a joint Zoom meeting with each one of you in the near future.  
An important note: No formal training exists to prepare anyone for the position of ED at a global field schools’ provider. Giulia, therefore, will initially focus on listening and learning. As smart and experienced as she may be, Giulia is wise enough to understand that the devil is in the details and it takes time to learn all the minute details that go into operating a global organization. I suspect Giulia will be short on initial promises and big on using her two ears (and the considerable grey matter between them….). My experience is that Giulia is a fast learner and good at following through and addressing challenges. I believe you will find it a delight to work with her and I am looking forward to building an exceptional FSTF with Giulia at the helm.
For now, Giulia and myself are using our private email addresses. Feel free to communicate with us through those. Once we establish the FSTF website (fieldscience.org), we will begin using a professional communication system and will update our email addresses.
Sincerely,
Ran Boytner
CC’ed: Giulia Saltini Semerari"


I will update this update as more details become available.


July 28: More thoughts. Who are the field schools for?

Ever since I began reporting on the situation surrounding the IFR, due to the sexual assaults committed on field school students by Danielle Kurin's then-husband, I have been talking with colleagues about the whole field school setup. While no one doubts that many field school directors are serious about supplying a stimulating, educational experience to the students who attend, there is another side to the field schools that is more about money than education. For example, IFR always charged enough money to provide a surplus of funds (in the form of overhead) to field directors, who otherwise might not be able to fund their excavations and their research--grant funding for archaeology is not exactly generous in the best of times. This financial side of things deserves more exploration and reporting, but meanwhile I welcome comments on it. (Indeed, the comments sections of these blog posts have become very instructive and interesting of late.)


Update August 3: Boytner's new organization appears to gain steam. Is he working with IFR? Is IFR jettisoning its field schools and letting Boytner take them over? All of the above? None of the above?


From: Ran Boytner <rboytner@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, August 3, 2020 4:05 PM
Subject: Additional updates

Dear Colleague,
We are moving forward at a rapid pace. I am interviewing 29 scholars from a range of disciplines who expressed interest in serving on the new field school organization Board. Once selected and seated, the Board will take over and oversee all operations of this new organization. Dr. Saltini Semerari will answer directly and exclusively to this Board. I will then be able to focus on my own research and fund raising activities.
I am happy to report that we reached 72% of the endowment fundraising goal (direct donations and pledges). I am quite surprised by such a positive response from the donor community as I did not expect to raise so much money in such a short time. I believe there is a re-focus on higher education – especially for the experiential, field science type – and folks are acting with amazing generosity. This is great news for all field school directors as endowment funds will be crucial for tuition reduction and scholarships to deserving students.  
Sincerely,
Ran Boytner

















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440 Comments

Anonymous said…

https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/

Dr. Willeke Wendrich is actively recruiting faculty and students for Summer 2021 IFR field schools, planned to operate in pandemic hotspots such as India (10,727,240 cases), UK (3,772,813 cases), Spain (2,830,478 cases), Italy (2,529,070 cases), and Turkey (2,464,030 cases). IFR field schools in the US (26,368,428 cases), Colombia (2,067,575 cases), and China (89,378 cases; ns. may be underestimated) are already full. Six additional field schools are offered in Ireland (192,645 cases), which is currently experiencing one of the world’s highest COVID-19 infection rates due to the UK variant and EU vaccine shortfalls. None of these countries is projected to be fully vaccinated by early summer.
This all in spite of the fact that the University of California Education Abroad Program and some of her more responsible colleagues in the UC system have already started canceling their summer programs in these countries over two months ago.
Such flagrant contempt to health and safety guidelines demonstrates once again that Wendrich sees IFR as an independent queendom to be ruled by her whims and fancies. A truly horrible example from a scholar at a public research university who is expected to promote cultural awareness, sensibility and sensitivity.
Anonymous said…
Re: the above comment:
> The Institute for Field Research opened today two field schools in Denmark.
> Denmark is currently on extreme lockdown due to increase of the more transmissible B.1.1.7 variant.
> The Center for Disease Control has this on their website (https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-denmark): Level 4: Very High Level of COVID-19 in Denmark. Travelers should avoid all travel to Denmark.
> None of these warnings appear on these IFR programs pages.
> Even if IFR believes the situation may change by summer, it is bad practice to open, enroll and collect student fees for programs in a country with a “should void all travel” warning.
Anonymous said…
Add to the above Jason De Leon’s fieldschool in Arizona that is now full and scheduled to start in May. Up to couple weeks ago AZ was holding the record of covid rates “in the world” and sadly is still experiencing one of the highest mortality rates in the nation. Even state officials are advising us not to plan too far ahead and even with Biden’s best intentions we’ll be lucky if 50% of the American population are vaccinated by then. And then there’s the mutations and the fourth wave. ¿Qué onda Jason?
Anonymous said…


https://ifrglobal.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Syllabus-US-AZ-UMP-Ruby-2021.pdf

The following protocol in the AZ-UMP-Ruby Field School is just mind-boggling:

>MANAGING COVID-19 CASES & OUTBREAKS
>If COVID-19 cases occur among the staff of students and they exhibit mild to no >symptoms, these
>students will be asked to quarantine in their tent and to take their meals separate >from the rest of the
>team. Because we are camping we have flexibility and space to isolate students and >staff if needed.
>For more serious COVID cases and other medical emergencies, we will make use of a >community health
>center in Arivaca (approximately 30 minutes from Ruby) or an ICU in Green Valley >(approximately 1 >hour
>and 15 minutes from Ruby).
>If any COVID cases occur among our team members, we will inform the local community >of Arivaca via
>the community health center. Laundry of COVID-positive individuals will be taken into >Arivaca and
>washed in the washing machines at the Arivaca action center, after which the washing >machine will be
>disinfected.

Say whaaaat??? This is not some 19th century dogsled expedition to the high arctic, so I just don’t get why quarantine infected team members in their tents and risk further contagions or complications (Ruby being only 90 minutes away from Tucson. Google it.) And is there a 24-7 medical doctor on staff to take care of those symptomatic students? Or why send the more serious cases to an impoverished community health center and use their laundry facilities, instead of back home or to a hospital where students can get proper treatment? And wouldn’t that further strain the scarce medical resources and risk spreading infection in a rural migrant community? Sounds like they did not think that one through.
Anonymous said…

Students who plan to enroll in Jason de Leon’s or other IFR field schools should at least be made aware of the dire situation.

This headline is from last week:

“Arizona again ranks highest in U.S. for weekly COVID-19 case, death rates”
https://www.azcentral.com/story/news/local/arizona-health/2021/01/28/arizona-coronavirus-jan-28-update-4-671-new-cases-176-new-known-deaths/4287632001/

“The rate of cases per 100,000 people is highest in Yuma County, followed by Santa Cruz.”
Santa Cruz county is where the Ruby field school will take place.

This one’s from January 16 is relevant too:
“Arizona has highest rate of COVID-19 in world, data shows”
https://www.abc15.com/news/state/arizona-has-highest-rate-of-covid-19-in-world-data-shows

Evidently Arizona and Ireland are competing for the world’s highest rate of COVID-19 cases per capita.
Currently, the Institute of Field Research has six field schools in Ireland.

As they insist in their website:
“Students interested in participating in IFR programs must weigh whether the potential risk is worth the value of education provided.”
Anonymous said…

Gosh, bringing the laundry of COVID-positive field school students all the way to the Arivaca action center sure reminds one of those smallpox-infested blankets.
I must be missing something here. By now pretty much everyone I know already binned their field work plans, so I admit there is something really peculiar behind that IFR doggedness to push PI’s and students to risk their health and that of nearby communities in the middle of a still raging pandemic. Why not wait another year? I would imagine that “geniuses” like Jason De Leon are not desperate for research funds, but does anyone know if these board officers are compensated for their service? Is there a hanging debt over that institute or some legal liability if they postpone or cancel courses? Something shady is going on and many out there are curious to know what it is before sending more students their way.
Anonymous said…
http://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Search.aspx?facility=Y
Organization Name: Institute for Field Research

***
Founding Documents.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=Founding+Documents.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8018f1bc

Form 1023 Explanation, Part V:
Q8b: As needed for start up expenses, Dr. Ran Boytner will loan up to $150,000 to the IFR at an annual interest rate no higher than 7.500%. (This is essentially a line of credit on which IFR may draw as needed). He will not require any collateral for such a loan. An annual interest rate of 7.500% is highly competitive in the present market, especially for uncollateralized loans. In fact, no bank or other financial institution agreed to loan the IFR any sums as it has no assets and could not provide any collateral for the loan (Dr. Boytner has arranged to borrow the money from a third party at 7.500% interest rate using his house as collateral).

***
2010 IRS Form 990-EZ.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=IRS+Form+990-EZ+2010.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8018f1bb

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
RAN BOYTNER, WORKING CAPITAL FOR START-UP. Loan to the organization. $75,000

***
2012 IRS Form 990.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=85765.pdf&document_id=09027b8f801bae02

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
RAN BOYTNER, WORKING CAPITAL FOR START-UP. Loan to the organization. $75,000

***
2013 IRS Form 990.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=590349.PDF&document_id=09027b8f80203791

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
RAN BOYTNER, OFFICER, CAPITAL. Loan to the organization. $95,000

PART V:
THE FOUNDER OF THE ORGANIZATION HAS MADE A LOAN TO THE ORGANIZATION FOR CASH FLOW PURPOSE. THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS HAS DETERMINED THAT INTEREST SHOULD BE PAID AT 7.5%. CURRENTLY, THE ORGANIZATION IN NOT PAYING INTEREST ON THE LOAN, AND APPROXIMATELY $15,000 OF INTEREST EXPENSE HAS BEEN INCURRED. SINCE THE 990 IS PREPARED ON THE CASH BASIS, THIS ACCRUAL IS NOT REFLECTED.

***
2014 IRS Form 990.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=784000.PDF&document_id=09027b8f8023376a


SCHEDULE L, Part II:
RAN BOYTNER, OFFICER, CAPITAL. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $95,000. Balance due: $70,140.

PART V: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION:
IN 2011, THE FOUNDER AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE ORGANIZATION, RAN BOYTNER, LOANED $75,000 TO THE ORGANIZATION IN ORDER TO ALLOW IT TO MEET ITS CASH FLOW REQUIREMENTS. AT THAT TIME, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS APPROVED A 7.5% PER ANNUM INTEREST RATE. IN 2012, RAN BOYTNER LOANED AN ADDITIONAL $20,000 TO THE ORGANIZATION BRINGING THE TOTAL LOAN TO $95,000.
THE ORGANIZATION WAS FINANCIALLY UNABLE TO PAY THE INTEREST ON THIS LOAN UNTIL THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR. IN SUMMARY FOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR END OCTOBER 31, 2014, THE
ORGANIZATION PAID $16,242 INTEREST RELATING TO THE PRIOR YEAR'S INTEREST ACCRUAL AND $6,698 FOR THE CURRENT YEAR EXPENSE. IN ADDITION, THE ORGANIZATION MADE PRINCIPAL PAYMENTS IN THE AMOUNT OF $24,860.

***
2015 RRF-1.
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=937940.PDF&document_id=09027b8f8027155c

January 3, 2016
Attorney General of CA
Registry of Charitable Trusts
P.O. Box 903447
Sacramento, CA 94203-4470
Dear Sir/Madam:
During the Fiscal Year 2014-15, Mr. Yuval bar Zemer — a member of the IFR Board of Directors— provided a loan to the organization in the total sum of $80,000. That loan carries a 7.5% interest rate. The loan was provided as the IFR was unable to secure the expansion of its Line of Credit from our bank (City National Bank — see attached). This loan is not secured and will be paid over 30 years. The IFR Board of Directors approved the loan.
Sincerely,
Ran Boytner
Executive Director
Anonymous said…
***
IRS Form 990 Series (2015).
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=2015+IRS+Form+990.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8030f068

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
YUVAL BAR ZEMER, DIRECTOR, CAPITAL. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $80,000. Balance due: $83,370.

Part V: Supplemental Information
IN 2011, THE FOUNDER AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE ORGANIZATION, RAN BOYTNER, LOANED
$75,000 TO THE ORGANIZATION IN ORDER TO ALLOW IT TO MEET ITS CASH FLOW REQUIREMENTS.
AT THAT TIME, THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS APPROVED A 7.5% PER ANNUM INTEREST RATE. IN 2012,
RAN BOYTNER LOANED AN ADDITIONAL $20,000 TO THE ORGANIZATION BRINGING THE TOTAL LOAN TO $95,000
IN APRIL, 2015, THE ORGANIZATION REPAID THE LOAN TO RAN BOYTNER IN FULL. IN OCTOBER, 2015, A BOARD MEMBER, YUVAL BAR ZEMER, LOANED $80,000 TO THE ORGANIZATION AT A 7.5% PER ANNUM INTEREST RATE THAT WAS APPROVED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

***
IRS Form 990 Series (2016 L).
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=1340120.PDF&document_id=09027b8f802f6332

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
Yuval Bar Zemer, Director, Capital. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $80,000. Balance due: $115,026.

Part V, Supplemental Information:
PART II LINE 1: IN OCTOBER 2015, A BOARD MEMBER, YUVAL BAR ZEMER, LOANED $80,000 TO
THE ORGANIZATION AT A 7.5% PER ANNUM INTEREST RATE. IN NOVEMBER 2015, YUVAL BAR ZEMER
LOANED THE ORGANIZATION ANOTHER $20,000 AT 7.5% INTEREST RATE PER ANNUM. IN DECEMBER
2015, YUVAL BAR ZEMER LOANED THE ORGANIZATION ANOTHER $20,000 AT 7.5% PER ANNUM
INTEREST RATE. ALL LOANS WERE APPROVED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.

BOARD OF GOVERNORS MEETING MINUTES
May 23, 2015; 4:00-6:00pm
Attending: Willeke Wendrich (Chair), Yuval bar Zemer (Secretary), Alex Fisch, Fred Limp (via Skype)
Motion #1
Approve loan from Yuval Bar Zemer (Board member) to the IFR for a maximum of $180,000 at a 7.5%
annual interest rate.
Motion unanimously carried

***
IRS Form 990 Series (2017).
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=298168.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8032d0f2

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
LOAN FROM YBZ, WORKING CAPITAL, DIRECTOR. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $80,000. Balance due: $79,441.

Schedule L, Part V - Additional Information
YUVAL BAR ZEMER LOANED THE ORGANIZATION $60,000 SEPTEMBER 2017 AT 7.5% PER ANNUM. AN ADDITIONAL $20,000 WAS LOANDED OCTOBER 2017 AT 7.5% PER ANNUM. ALL LOANS WERE APPROVED BY THE BOARD.

***
Renewal Filing (2018).
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=530888.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8039c452

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
LOAN FROM YBZ, WORKING CAPITAL, DIRECTOR. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $100,000. Balance due: $99,726.

Schedule L, Part V - Additional Information:
YUVAL BAR ZEMER LOANED THE ORGANIZATION $60,000 SEPTEMBER 2017 AT 7.5% PER ANNUM. AN ADDITIONAL $20,000 WAS LOANDED OCTOBER 2017 AT 7.5% PER ANNUM. ALL LOANS WERE APPROVED BY THE BOARD.

***
Renewal Filing (2019).
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=642376.pdf&document_id=09027b8f803d736b

SCHEDULE L, Part II:
LOAN FROM YBZ, WORKING CAPITAL, DIRECTOR. Loan to the organization. Original principal amount: $100,000. Balance due: $50,000.

SCHEDULE L, Part V – Additional Information:
YUVAL BAR ZEMER LOANED THE ORGANIZATION $50,000 OCTOBER 2019 AT 7.7% PER ANNUM. THE LOAN WAS APPROVED BY THE BOARD.
Anonymous said…

If I may offer a layperson observation based on these tax returns. With 7.500% interest rates, Boytner and Bar Zemer would have each pocketed over $ 7,000 annually for their respective principals, which supposedly came out of IFR revenue. I think its technically legal but with some reservations.
First: if the interest accrued while serving as officer is excessive, this may violate IRS guidelines for 501(c)3 and perhaps even falls under private inurement. Second: considering that Boytner’s salary contributed directly to their annual deficit, him gaining from loan interest may be considered as double dipping and ethically questionable. Third: there is the conflict of interest generated by employees holding the organization (i.e. – the board) indebted which runs the risk of disrupting organizational hierarchy and decision-making (especially if the latter are responsible for hiring/firing the former, and are unable to make payments as stated in the tax forms). Forth: these financial gains seem to violate the “Enforcement of Conflicts Policy” declaration in the IFR tax returns, stating “In addition, as service on the board is unpaid, the executive director monitors all cash activity to ensure that no payments are made to board members other than receipted and authorized travel reimbursements.” Someone with more knowledge on Nonprofits should look into this.
Anonymous said…
In the town hall, Willeke talked about being the IFR chairperson ‘’around 2013’’ (when in reality it was from 2012 to 2017) and then handing the seat to ‘’Yuval Bar Zemer, a real estate developer, and a great donor to IFR’’.

From these tax returns it doesn’t look like the 100K was a donation.

Having businessmen and usurers managing academic non-profits is fraught with problems and doesn’t always benefit the students.
Anonymous said…
Anonymous @ February 17, 2021 at 11:15 AM said:
“First: if the interest accrued while serving as officer is excessive, this may violate IRS guidelines for 501(c)3 and perhaps even falls under private inurement.”
That is correct. In order to pass IRS muster, the lending board members must charge interest at or below market rate. According to
the current AIR on a conventional small business loan is around 3% to 7%. If the board member charges his 501(c)3 organization interest rates at 7.5%, then he is charging above market rate. These issues are hardly noticeable when filing 990s but more typically revealed in field audits.
Anonymous said…
The link above got deleted. It is https://www.valuepenguin.com/average-small-business-loan-interest-rates
Average Small Business Loan Interest Rates in 2021: Comparing Top Lenders
Anonymous said…
Note that the above-linked 2012 form identifies “WILLEKE WENDRICH” as the principal officer. Perhaps she signed on the loan contract on behalf of the IFR? Can this explain why she’s so gung-ho about having more students sign up for fieldschools in all these pandemic hot spots? It can also explain why it was difficult to get rid of Ran Boytner and why she was all legal talk about the circumstances of his separation from the company.
Anonymous said…

There are three basic no-noes for nonprofit boards, known as 1) private benefits 2) private inurements 3) and excess benefit transactions. These IRS prohibitions are meant to ensure that private individuals affiliated with a 501(c)(3) will not benefit excessively from public charity activities.
It is difficult to understand from the reported numbers how exactly those loans worked, but, according to the 990s provided above, it is clear that since 2015 Real-Estate developer Yuval Bar Zemer is engaged in business transactions with the IFR that benefits him financially. Return “2016 L” states that between October and December of 2015 alone, Bar Zemer loaned the IFR $120K at 7.5% per annum interest (equivalent to $9K annual.) The letter to the California Attorney General/ Registry of Charitable Trusts specifies that this unsecured loan is to be paid over 30 years.
As explained by Wendrich in the townhall meeting and elaborated by readers of this blog, in September of 2017 Mr. Bar Zemer also became the IFR chairperson (he relinquished this position back to Wendrich in 2020.). The aforementioned IRS sanctions are even stricter when the benefiting individual is the organizational leader.
During this period, the tax returns also disclose a “Related Party Information Among Officers” in the form of Bar Zemer’s daughter being employed as the IFR Enrollment Director. The daughter is currently listed on IFR staff page as an Operations Consultant. If these are paid positions, then this creates yet another level of conflict of interest whereas the same individual who finances and leads the nonprofit also hires family members for key positions.
Anonymous said…
https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=Confirmation+of+Registration+Letter.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8018f1c2

The confirmation for IFR's charitable trust registration came from the office of… Kamala Harris! Maybe someone should let her know what’s going on.
Anonymous said…

Kurin joined as IFR board officer in 2016 under Wendrich’s watch, so I never got why in the 2016 Cotsen article she’s also indebted to Yufal Bar Zemer and refers to him as a mentor.
O.K., now I get it .
Anonymous said…

From day one many of us have considered the ifr as a business venture more than an academic nonprofit, but with this new evidence I’m $HOCKED that their reported gross revenue for 2018-2019 came close to $2MM!! Looks like the first year they turned a profit too. So maybe they’re not beating a dead horse like we all thought but milking a potential cash cow, and that’s another motive why they’re still fighting tooth and nail to keep it up and running. In this economy even a tenured professor at UCLA can use a financial lifeline down the road. It wouldn’t surprise me if post-pandemic they’ll sell, merge or go for-profit like many of these other service providers that cater to universities and faculty.
Anonymous said…

Anonymous - I suspect that their revenue may even be larger than reported, at least for some years.
Anyone who cares to closely compare the list of foreign field schools listed on their 990 returns (Schedule F) with those listed on their website for those same years (this helps: https://web.archive.org/web/*/www.ifrglobal.org), will notice some glaring discrepancies. It is true that many field schools got nixed and so were not reported, but I spotted at least one field school that most definitely was operated and funded by IFR but was not reported to the IRS for that same tax year. I believe we are talking about tens of thousands of dollars being omitted. That may be enough to suspect that the Institute of Field Research was engaged in tax fraud/evasion.
I am aware that this is a very serious claim that should not be made lightly, but I also know that I am right and the documented evidence is there for anyone who cares to check for themselves. I will leave it at that.
Anonymous said…
Sorry not seeing the cash cow...they are losing money every almost every year, and the years they are not the gains are small. Also not for profits dont pay taxes, so hard to see how anyone there could be guilty of tax evasion. I think we should be wary of throwing around accusations without doing the necessary homework to back them up...it detracts from credible posters and reports.
Michael Balter said…
I would just comment at this point that while I am allowing these accusations to be posted, as publisher of this blog, I am not endorsing their contents nor do they represent my views unless I state otherwise. I am allowing them to be published, however, because I too would encourage those who have evidence about these matters to either post it here, or contact me privately to discuss that evidence. thanks.
Anonymous said…
This may be relevant to the Kurin—Gomez case

https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=1340120.PDF&document_id=09027b8f802f6332

Scroll down to
BOARD OF GOVERNORS MEETING MINUTES
May 23, 2015
9. Alex Fisch will complete Sexual Harassment policy for the IFR and present at the next BOG meeting

Did they not have a sexual harassment policy before that year? And is it common to have an attorney whose main specialty is “natural resources” and “insolvency-related issues” (https://web.archive.org/web/20170216085401/http://ifrglobal.org/board-of-directors) write such important policies?
Perhaps something worth looking into.
Anonymous said…
From the same meeting minutes doc above:
“6. Although Aileen Getty declined to join the IFR Board, Yuval Bar Zemer will continue and engage her as a potential supporter.”

Good for her for saying no. The Gettys have enough scandals in their life.
Anonymous said…
“Also not for profits dont pay taxes”
From what I can see the IFR is a non-profit, which is somewhat different from a not-for-profit, but you are still right that also non-profits are tax-exempt. But the other person also makes a valid point that the money flowing through charitable trusts, especially revenue and expenses, needs to be reported truthfully and accurately on their informational 990. This is exactly how the IRS and the public can determine if, as you say, they are in actuality losing money or perhaps something else is happening since not all income is in fact reported. These provisions—in addition to disclosing other aspects such as assets, executive salaries, conflict of interest, etc.—are all there to ensure that 501(c)(3) organizations are not abusing their tax-exempt status.
The bottom line is that even an education-oriented non-profit can be corrupt and guilty of fraud, even if they submit their tax returns and their 990s are open to inspection. The much-discussed college admissions scandal was orchestrated out of Rick Singer’s non-profit, The Key Worldwide Foundation, and conceivably could have been caught earlier if people paid more attention to these red flags. You can learn more about this here if interested:
https://trust.guidestar.org/pay-attention-to-the-information-reported-on-form-990
https://nonprofitquarterly.org/hiding-in-plain-sight-a-nonprofit-fraud-story/
Take note that I am not saying that the IFR is like the KWF, and if anything I support the IFR mission, but if their revenue and expenses were not reflected fully on their 990s then this definitely merits further inquiry. I do suspect though that without an audit or other form of external investigation it will be impossible to know if this was simply a human error or a calculated fraud.
Anonymous said…
Those who attended the town hall may recall Ernestine Elster’s questions halfway through the meeting about IFR financial statements and ownership as a 501(c)(3). I was annoyed that Willeke et al. would just ignore that, bearing in mind Ernestine’s status at the Cotsen and how close they all are. Instead, they just moved on to talk about how awful Blater is. It is crystal clear now that they just didn’t want to open that can of worms.
Anonymous said…

Can someone please explain to me why a field school in ‘ghost town’ Arizona should cost $4,430? All the more since students pay for flights and insurance, cook their meals, wash their laundry, use personal digging equipment and camp in tents that they bring themselves. This is pricier than most of the European programs where you stay in hotels. From the included tuition break down, the one thing that could possibly justify this price tag would be the cost of instruction because credit units are only $300. So Dr. Haeden Stewart and Dr. Jason De León are paid to run this field school?
Anonymous said…

JDL earns more than enough at UCLA and anyway program directors are not being paid. At the same time, students expected the IFR to drop their prices this year, now that Wendrich revealed that they no longer hold an office and Ran Boytner is out so they’re not paying top management wages ($80,000 according to the last available public statement.) To add insult to injury, students are complaining that they recently added a $ 25 application fee and the Board of Governors and Academic Board, all well paid academics and entrepreneurs, stopped donating to scholarships as they used to in past years (read the interesting statement on top of this page https://ifrglobal.org/students/scholarships/). So basically the IFR is making money off students and their families who were hit hard by the pandemic, while eliminating the scholarships that are needed now more than ever.
Still the main question remains…where does all that tuition money go? Paying back the 120k + interest loan?
Anonymous said…
As I commented earlier on this blog post, there is certainly a sense of desperation to all this.

Last March IFR cancelled all their field schools in countries with Level 4 travel warnings, deemed the highest risk for travelers. In the UCLA Town Hall covered here, Dr. Wlleke Wendrich explained why: “we canceled all our summer 2020 field schools because it was just irresponsible to even think about sending people in the field.”
This year they completely reversed course and are encouraging faculty to operate, and students to join, IFR field schools in countries with Level 4 warnings. Recently they even added new programs in highest risk countries like Spain, Denmark and Nicaragua, to which the Center for Disease Control and Prevention recommends “Travelers should avoid all travel to these destinations.”
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/travelers/map-and-travel-notices.html

Meanwhile, in the real world, we were informed yesterday that the University of California Education Abroad Program (which includes UCLA where Wendrich teaches) cancelled **ALL** in-person 2021 Summer programs due to the ongoing uncertainty of COVID-19.
https://uceap.universityofcalifornia.edu/coronavirus-notice

I can’t put my finger on it quite yet, but there is something behind their delusional business strategy that isn't just repaying hefty loans. I guess it is a matter of time before we find out.
Anonymous said…

Thanks for sharing, and compare these statements:

UCLA’s International Education Office:
Summer 2021 Programs: All remaining Summer 2021 programs have transitioned to a virtual format via UCLA Travel Study or our Global Internship Program. Unfortunately, no in-person programs will run this summer as a result of the on-going pandemic and current travel restrictions. Summer in-person programs will return for 2022. The health and safety of our students and the faculty leading our programs is always our top priority. To learn more about our COVID-19-related changes, please visit our FAQ .

And, Institute of Field Research:
The Promising Future of Our 2021 Field Season.
Outlook for the IFR 2021 Field Season... So Far So Good!
…Since November 15th, IFR has been opening programs on a rolling basis. What was once a catalog of five open field schools in November 2020, is now a list of 14 open field schools located around the globe, with additional field programs likely to be approved in the coming month! So, stay tuned!

IEO and IFR people never saw eye to eye back when it was still running out of the Cotsen Institute, but this is pretty ridiculous. I call on the IFR Board to stop stringing students along and fully refund their 2021 tuition. They are not your loan collateral!
Anonymous said…
Responding to your question on twitter just now, which i’m not posting directly there to avoid retaliation from you-know-who:
The global situation is still very unpredictable and will be for many months to come, so my opinion is that they should cancel and reimburse students.
In the past we’ve seen the IFR react as soon as something is posted here, so someone there obviously reads your blog and these comments. The optimist in me prays they’ll now follow UCLA example and do the responsible and safe thing for their students and vulnerable populations in the U.S. and around the world. The realist, however, already expects them to chase after those students whose programs were canceled and redirect them to their own summer schools.
Anonymous said…
Is anyone aware of a student who has requested a refund for COVID reasons and not received one? I presume that everyone who signed up for a program this year knew about Covid risk? And can read all the links and Covid stats posted?
Anonymous said…
That’s a very good question that you’ll have to ask IFR directly. I don’t know about this year, but last year IFR ignored and refused students’ request for refund due to the pandemic, with the explanation that their cancellation policy states that students will only get reimbursed if the program is canceled by IFR themselves. Even after they eventually had to cancel, I heard of students who were waiting for full refund for over a month. This continues to be their cancellation policy this year, or at least that what’s on their website. I too presume that students can read the scary stats posted here, but IFR should also make sure to post those on their website so students will know exactly what they are getting themselves into, especially with those above-mentioned field schools that they opened just last month. The last time they updated their COVID-19 notification page (linked on their home page) was November 1, 2020, which frankly doesn’t inspire much confidence and make them suspect of misinformation. Regardless of what student knew or not, in the current situation there’s a limit to how long an organization can drag their “wait and see” attitude and hold student’s tuition hostage.
Anonymous said…

Sure Anonymous, students should have known the risks when they signed up for IFR field schools. Unlike UCLA where “The health and safety of our students and the faculty leading our programs is always our top priority,” every IFR program includes this disclaimer under Student Safety "The IFR primary concern is with education. Traveling and conducting field research involve risk. Students interested in participating in IFR programs must weigh whether the potential risk is worth the value of education provided.” If any student read this in November and still wanted to take the risk, then that’s certainly their problem (and also that of their fellow students, faculty, workers, communities, and the rest of the planet.)
Anonymous said…

On February 24, 2021 at 12:50 PM, Anonymous said…
“In the past we’ve seen the IFR react as soon as something is posted here, so someone there obviously reads your blog and these comments”.
You called it! No more than a day or two after people remarked here about some questionable loans/tax practices and the lack of scholarships this year, out of the blue do I get an IFR newsletter about a scholarship for economically-challenged students to attend IFR programs. The amusing thing is that the undersigned “IFR Team” felt the need to add that the donors of the scholarship (still not IFR) is “a Foundation that invests in effective organizations that operate with integrity” and urges the subscriber to “feel free to forward this email to anyone who may be interested in the decisions the IFR is making towards a more inclusive future for all aspiring researchers”.
A little bit on the nose, IFR, don’t you think?
Anonymous said…
On what planet do you think an organization without staff can see a blog post one afternoon and by the next day have a donor and scholarship program in place? Do you have any clue how organizations work? Stop undermining Balter's work with your own petty and ridiculous claims. Dont know what ax you have to grind, but these sorts of baseless claims reflect poorly on what others are trying to accomplish here
Anonymous said…
https://ifrglobal.org/students/scholarships/
Wait a minute . . .
If the representatives of the Board of Governors and Academic Board gave over $100,000 last year for scholarships, but then all the field programs were canceled, did they just take the money back and this is why there are no ifr scholarships this year?
Anonymous said…

[Quoting]
“Anonymous said…
On what planet do you think an organization without staff can see a blog post one afternoon and by the next day have a donor and scholarship program in place? Do you have any clue how organizations work? Stop undermining Balter's work with your own petty and ridiculous claims. Dont know what ax you have to grind, but these sorts of baseless claims reflect poorly on what others are trying to accomplish here”

The IFR web site lists four staff members and around fifteen academics and entrepreneurs, so surely not an organisation “without staff”. One of the staff member is a “Marketing and Social Media Manager” and another board member “helps with marketing and communication strategy”. Two other members already confirmed that they read Balter’s Blog, where, according to them, they found out about their executive director sexual misconduct. So any one of those representatives could have seen this and acted quickly, especially if they think that enough colleagues read this Blog (which I suspect is the case).
And in fact, this is precisely how organisations work! At least the one I work for. Publicity and reputation are everything, and swift damage control if often necessary to avoid PR crisis. Plus, I understand that the scholarship was already advertised for some time, so the counter-reaction probably referred to the newsletter, which was easy enough to put together in a day and mail the world. I, for one, thought it was odd that I should be informed of a scholarship that is particular to this one school in Los Angeles, and the heavy-handed language of “integrity” also caught my eye. It could all be a coincidence, but I think it is quite plausible.

I should add that in the spirit of a productive exchange, it will be useful if people posting here avoid personal attacks and do their homework before commenting. Ultimately we all want the same outcome, an industry free of malpractice and a safe environment for our students.
Anonymous said…
If you look at the titles of the staffers (one of whom is a consultant and so not staff)there is no way that one of them set up a scholarship in a day. And that is assuming that it is not true as another poster said above that all staff had bee laid off. Now you are saying the scholarship was there for awhile and only the email was a a response. I cant keep up.

Mr. Balter, I am sorry I cannot keep reading your blog and wont be. Sadly these uninformed folks with grievances are detracting from the important work surrounding MeToo
Anonymous said…
Sorry to see you go, Anonymous. But wait! Before you leave us…seeing how you are quite familiar with the inner workings of this organization, can you please comment on why the board of directors did not give a single cent to students’ scholarships this year? And where did the money for the 2020 scholarships disappeared to? Thought maybe you’ll know.
Anonymous said…

Yes, what I was wondering too. If these scholarship funds were earmarked or even restricted for that purpose by a give or get board* (as opposed to carved out of IFR annual revenue), then if not spent due to the pandemic we’d expect these to carry over to the next cycle. The fact that these scholarships are not offered this year probably means that the board *withdrew*, not just discontinued, the funds and their financial support for students. This is an unorthodox move from such a large group of gainfully employed and seemingly well-off academics, business professionals, and lawyers. Probably nothing illegal since it’s their money, but it does raise some ethical questions that I hope we can get answers to.

*One of the tax records mentions a $15K Give/$30K Get policy proposal.
Anonymous said…
By the way, UCLA announced about a month ago that unless these are for training essential workers, all Summer sessions courses will take place online to help slow the spread of the virus. I know that IFR no longer works with UCLA, but Jason de Leon and Willeke Wendrich are still UCLA faculty so I am mystified by their dismissive attitude to these institutional best practices when it comes to safety and risk management at their self-run organization. What makes IFR Summer courses any different, sending groups of students to study and work closely together all over the globe? If she had the choice, will she also insist for in-person summer courses at the Cotsen Institute? I think not and with all due respect, we archaeologists are still not essential workers.
Anonymous said…
A very good point. If you browse through the university policies of the faculty serving on the IFR governing board, you will notice that each and every one restricts, suspend or flat-out prohibits international travel for their students, faculty and staff until further notice. Some schools like Harvard go even further to prohibit PLANNING or SCHEDULING of domestic and international travel. These restrictions similarly apply to university-issued health insurance policies, which means that if still in effect students may not be covered if participating in foreign field schools.

I’ve seen one school that directly cites this CDC guidance for Institutions of Higher Education:
“Consider postponing or canceling student international travel programs”
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/student-foreign-travel.html

Like we saw with the Title IX loophole discussed at the townhall, the IFR takes advantage of being an independent nonprofit to go around their respective university policies and to operate under the radar.
Anonymous said…
Apropos “Title IX” — I hope everyone caught, in the last Backdirt issue, these two very different narratives about the context of the June 11 town hall meeting.

https://ioa.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/media/assets/Backdirt2020.pdf

1. Willeke Wendrich:

Several other events profoundly affected academia,
archaeology, conservation, and our institute. In May the
Department of Education amended Title IX legislation in
ways that provide less protection to survivors and more
to perpetrators. It diminished protection off-campus,
which is detrimental for archaeologists, for whom field -
work is part and parcel of the job. Later in May, George
Floyd was killed by police officer Derek Chauvin, one
event in a pattern of police brutality against Black Amer-
icans, resulting in worldwide demonstrations in support
of Black Lives Matter. July saw expiration of the exemp-
tion to the rule that foreign students can only get visas
when they receive in-person education. This exemption
was put in place because of the Covid-19 pandemic and
was extended only after a number of universities filed
lawsuits against the federal government. An effort to dis-
cuss, address, and respond to these disturbing develop-
ments began at a town hall meeting on June 11, followed
by the work of several dedicated, student-driven work-
ing groups, and a retreat on November 20.

2. Carly Pope:

On May 25, 2020, we all witnessed the stran-
gulation of George Floyd by a police officer in
Minneapolis. This horrific murder, one in a litany of
other police brutality against people of color, came
two months after UCLA shut its doors for the foresee-
able future because of the Covid-19 pandemic and
two weeks before a town hall meeting of the Cotsen
Institute about changes to Title IX and allegations
of sexual harassment at field schools of the Institute
for Field Research.

I think Carly remembers better why the town hall meeting was summoned and what was discussed. Willeke probably just forgot.
Anonymous said…
Totally, in between all her lies and evasion that day I don’t recall any mention of George Floyd or Black Lives Matter. I do remember however when she said:
[19:03] Wendrich: “We all know that field school in the past, and even nowadays, are sometimes kind of almost student slavery. Students are put in the trench to dig, but they don’t really get any education.”
I also remember my jaw dropped. How insensitive it is to diminish like that the inhumane exploitation and brutal experience of slaves, by comparing it to that of students in a field school! Instead she could have explained why she allowed Ran Boytner to reject African students from IFR field schools, instead of just dismissing the question as “a misunderstanding”.
Anonymous said…
I am always amazed when I see institutional directors appropriate gestures, mannerisms, and rhetoric from politicians they profess to scorn. I have often wondered if it was from too much TV news exposure or just what. In this case we're watching Wendrich dissolve into the muck of evasive jibberish and double talk we were treated to for years by press secretaries like Huckabee Sanders and McEnany.
Anonymous said…

And of course that hogwash again about the importance of Title IX, after she herself enabled and covered-up for two perpetrators who were previously penalized by Title IX investigations, and who then went on, under her guard, to intimidate & harass more people. Besides, if T9 is so important for archaeologists in the field, why does IFR still prefers to operate outside of its regulations?
I’ve seen all sorts of shysters in my time, but Willeke Wendrich really takes the cake. I find it unfortunate that many (though clearly not all) who tuned in to that June meeting were later duped by her trickery simply because it was easier and safer, especially for them graduate students.
Anonymous said…
The political analogy is an apt one. Most politicians base their decisions not on morality or ethical standards, but based on their allegiance to powerful leaders, personal advantage, or facing the risk that challenging the norm will ruin their career (Cf. Republicans in the impeachment trial.) This puts those who witness injustice and want to do the right thing in an extremely difficult position — professionally, economically and emotionally. During the Trump era I’ve noticed a sharp increase in media coverage regarding this topic within governmental spheres, including “survival guides” like this one https://www.pogo.org/analysis/2019/03/caught-between-conscience-and-career/
A similar culture of fear and retribution is very much alive in academic circles, and in the specific organization investigated here it is not just the leader but also the “party” behind her. Just look at the titles of those other VIPs sitting on the IFR Board of Directors. You have Professors, Deans, Center Directors, Museum Curators... even one President Emeritus of the Society of American Archaeology. And of course, let’s not forget the mandatory Esquire. This in itself is enough to keep even the most senior faculty mum, let alone “lowly” grad students who constantly have to worry about meager job prospects. Given the compelling evidence for corruption and coverups, we have to give it to them for succeeding in building a rather effectual stonewall, which is also why we don’t hear more uproar from the archaeological community as we would expect.
Anonymous said…
Charlotte Bennett, former aide to Governor Andrew Cuomo, accuses him of harassment and says that he had asked her questions about her sex life and whether she was monogamous.
Weren’t those Ran Boytner’s pickup lines of his female students and employees?
https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/03/chief-of-international-archaeology.html
Anonymous said…
My two cents to the risk management thread, in the hope that this will help people make more informed and responsible decisions.
First cent:
“Engaging in field research and traveling are inherently risky endeavors” (from the circulated IFR COVID-19 protocols) is an extremely misleading statement to make in that it downplays the severity of the current situation. When we’re talking about a highly contagious and deadly virus, “risky” is not the same as your typical digging injury or stomach issues. We are dealing with a risk factor which is almost impossible to mitigate and contain during travel and archaeological field work. Participants live together, work together, study together, eat together, travel together, and there’s simply no way around it even with masks, handwashing and social distancing. One sick person and that “risk” extends to the entire team and everyone who participate, including the surrounding population who didn’t chose to participate in a field school.
Second cent:
IFR’s February announcement of their new programs in Spain, Nicaragua, Denmark and other places was circulated about a month after we started hearing about the B.1.1.7 and other highly infections variants. I must admit I was mortified and enraged at the principal investigators when I read that newsletter. They are the ones who are fully aware that the CDC still has all these countries at Level 4 (which as pointed above most universities strictly prohibit travel to), and therefore should know better than to involve students in such an unpredictable situation over the summer. The Institute for Field Research is equally guilty by encouraging irresponsible faculty to indulge their greed and increase the threat to public and global health. Throw in the slow and hectic vaccination worldwide, restricted access to healthcare, decrease in resources and increased poverty, civil unrest, enhanced anti-American sentiment for still being the leading contagious country, unpredictable border closures, and so on and so forth and you have a recipe for disaster. You know, all those good reasons why good scholars also won’t run field schools in war zones.
Please do the right thing!
Anonymous said…
↑THIS↑↑THIS↑↑THIS↑

Don’t know who in their operation came up with this idiotic document -- ifrglobal.org/ifr-covid-19-practices/
but they can’t launch new programs in countries that the CDC strictly recommends to avoid all travel to, and actually recommends to CANCEL ALL STUDENT INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS, while also claim that “To support our students, faculty, and the local communities in which we work in reducing the risk of COVID-19 transmission, IFR has transformed our programs with expert guidance from risk management and health authorities such as the Center for Disease Control and the World Health Organization.”

They cannot sincerely mean that “The well-being of our students, faculty, and the communities in which we operate our field schools is our highest priority” if they admit that the safety measures they are putting in place “cannot guarantee that program participants will not contract COVID-19 or other infectious diseases that may be passed from insects, animals, or people.”

It is illogical to ask students to “provide evidence of a negative PC-RCT COVID-19 test taken within 72 hours before the start of their program” and also recognize that “While in transit to and from their program, students may travel through and from locations that have different COVID-19 impacts and this may affect a student’s risk exposure.”

It is dangerous and most unethical to do this: “Some IFR field schools take place in remote locations. Participants in such programs should be aware that rapid evacuation and quick access to treatment in emergency or medical facilities may not be possible” but also inform students that they are “responsible for housing and other isolation costs for any quarantine that is required before, during, or after an IFR field school” and “At present, IFR does not provide coverage for COVID-19 related evacuation and related expenses in its insurance package.”

This is a completely cover-our-asses policy. The responsibility to keep EVERYONE safe, not just the people in the project, falls not on the students but on those who decide to operate a summer school in a pandemic with the majority of the world still unvaccinated, while not even insisting that their students get vaccinated beforehand. The ‘Safer at Home’ policy is not for naught and for the sake of everyone on this sick planet should be applied here as well.
Anonymous said…
After Friday’s comment about UCLA I got curious and checked if IFR’s school of record, Connecticut College, allows for 2021 summer courses or international programs. Strangely, I couldn’t find any of these field schools listed on their website. You’d think they would be, seeing that all IFR syllabi appear to have a Connecticut College course codes and students get credits and transcripts from their registrar.
I searched in:
2021 class schedule
https://ssbprod.conncoll.edu/CONN/bwckschd.p_disp_dyn_sched
2020-2021 Course Catalog
http://conncoll.smartcatalogiq.com/2020-2021/Catalog
Anthropology courses
http://conncoll.smartcatalogiq.com/2020-2021/Catalog/Courses/ANT-ANTHROPOLOGY
Summer courses (only 2020 available)
https://www.conncoll.edu/academics/summer-courses/
Study away courses
https://www.conncoll.edu/academics/global-focus/study-away/

Before I start yelling “SCAAAAM” … am I missing something? If someone reading this knows what’s going on then please post.
Anonymous said…
Re Bennett: at least she’ll get an independent and impartial investigation, which is more than what Boytner’s survivors were deemed worthy of by UCLA and IFR.
Anonymous said…

Responding to,

M Balter, sued for helping survivors of abuse
@mbalter
Recent commenters on this post are asking if @IFRArchaeology is endangering students by holding field schools while the pandemic is still raging, especially in some of the countries they are sending people to. Please read and comment. #archaeology https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html
10:37 AM · Mar 1, 2021·Twitter Web App

I am entirely in agreement with the other commenters that this is very troubling. COVID-infected students may not get immediate access to medical treatment #and# need to take care of their own and quarantine and evacuation arrangements? Why not just throw them on the plague cart and into the pit?
Can’t the SAA get involved?
Anonymous said…
Judging by a similar case a while back, the short answer is no. SAA is not an adjudicating or investigatory organization. If a formal complaint is filed, the Findings Verification Committee may recommend sanctions against members if found to have violated the society’s code of ethics. IFR is not a member even though its officers may be, so I doubt this bylaw can help here. I imagine the same is true for the RPA, where the grievance process is restricted to individual members, not for or against institutions. Someone may correct me if I am wrong.
Anonymous said…
Greg Abbott & Tate Reeves just followed IFR example in ignoring all CDC warnings so they can make a profit.
Anonymous said…

Ugh! Echoes the comment above that IFR leadership are acting more like self-serving politicians than socially-responsible scientists. Wouldn’t be surprised if they soon announce opening more field schools. Hey, if Texas and Mississippi think it's safe enough!

As a reminder, this C.D.C. guidance is still in effect:
“Consider postponing or canceling student international travel programs.
Given the COVID-19 pandemic, Institutes of Higher Education (IHE) should consider postponing or canceling upcoming student international travel programs. Those overseeing student international travel programs should be aware that students may face unpredictable circumstances, such as travel restrictions, challenges returning home, and challenges accessing health care while abroad.
If IHEs choose to continue student international travel programs, they should evaluate the risks in the host country by checking CDC’s COVID-19 Travel Health Notices by Destination and The U.S. Department of State’s Travel. They can also check with the destination’s Office of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Health, and the U.S. Department of State about COVID-19-specific entry requirements, such as COVID-19 testing and quarantine.”
Anonymous said…
https://ifrglobal.org/
https://ifrglobal.org/program/nicaragua-granada/
The Syllabus of Nicaragua says that the country has very minimal impact from the pandemic, that in December only 35 cases were reported. Lie!! The program operator are very mal-informed or they beleive only what they want to beleive.
In the first place, the official numbers in December of the MINSA report more or less 250 new cases. Not 35.People that live in Nicaragua or got freinds that live there also recognize that these are lies and real numbers are completely undervalued by the Orteg’as government all through 2020 y 2021. They keep call it a Pneumonia outbreak but the last report of independent organization Observatorio Ciudadano reports suspected 13,140 Covid cases and 2,976 dead.
Get more real information and protect yourself check the website of Observatorio Ciudadano https://observatorioni.org/ and in English
-https://www.facebook.com/ObservatorioCovidNi/
if you do not read Spanish, you can check these internet articles or googlea the words: Nicaragua COVID Ortega,
-https://www.thenewhumanitarian.org/news-feature/2020/09/02/Nicaragua-conflict-political-unrest-poverty-coronavirus
-https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/blar.13176
-https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/22/americas/nicaragua-covid-19-ortega-intl/index.html
-https://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(20)30131-5/fulltext
- https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jan/03/nicaraguas-covid-story-far-from-truth
Anonymous said…
C.D.C. is fully aware that the “very minimal impact from the pandemic” is all political propaganda; https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-nicaragua
Level 4: Very High Level of COVID-19 in Nicaragua
Travelers should avoid all travel to Nicaragua.

The U.S. Embassy in Nicaragua also acknowledges it, even if more diplomatically;
https://ni.usembassy.gov/covid-19-information-2-2-2-2/
* Current official COVID-19 reporting by the Nicaragua Ministry of Health includes 6,445 confirmed cases (with 173 resulting in death.)
* Independent health organizations estimate the number of cases to be much higher, with one civil society group estimating nearly 12,000 suspected cases. Government hospitals are also reported as understaffed and struggling to cope with the COVID-19 pandemic.
* Effective January 26, all airline passengers to the United States ages two years and older must provide a negative COVID-19 viral test taken within three calendar days of travel.

I hope students are aware of the factual situation rather than what IFR tells them it is. I would certainly not send my kids to Nicaragua over the summer.
Anonymous said…
@mbalter
Is @IFRArchaeology risking the health and safety of its field students? Commenters on this blog post suggest they are. Perhaps IFR leaders should make a public comment of their own. @UCLACotsen #archaeology #coronavirus https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html
12:56 PM · Mar 3, 2021·Twitter for iPad


Don’t hold your breath Michael. They first promised but then didn’t issue any public comments after they got rid of both Kurin and Boytner for harassment related concerns. No wonder. In those instances when students and colleagues forced them to explain their actions, their statements blew up horribly in their face. It happened each and every time: Wendrich’s statements to you, Boytner’s letter to colleagues, their email to P.I.s, the town hall. This is normally what hjappens to those trying to build a defense out of a rotten foundation of lies and deceit.
Anonymous said…

It looks as if IFR leaders didn’t get this memo from the White House either:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/25/proclamation-on-the-suspension-of-entry-as-immigrants-and-non-immigrants-of-certain-additional-persons-who-pose-a-risk-of-transmitting-coronavirus-disease/
And-
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/travelers/from-other-countries.html
Right now I see six fieldschools in Ireland, one in the United Kingdom, and seven in Schengen countries. If President Biden thinks it’s too risky to allow people from these countries to enter the US because of the COVID variants, you would think it would be equally risky to send young Americans to these countries and then bring them back.
Anonymous said…
Willeke and Jason are probably not too worried about the pandemic this summer, because as of two days ago they can get their vaccine ASAP as a UCLA faculty.
Their students, the ones who will dig for them in the field, are unfortunately not eligible :(
Anonymous said…
If the I.F.R. is fudging infection/mortality stats just to get their programs filled, then this is a real concern for the archaeological community.
This is a good read for those interested in what’s happening in Denmark:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3792894

Abstract
Background: The more infectious SARS-CoV-2 virus lineage B.1.1.7, rapidly spread in Europe after December 2020, and a concern of B.1.1.7 causing more severe disease has been raised. Denmark has one of Europe´s highest capacities per capita of SARS-CoV-2 reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT PCR) test and whole genome sequencing (WGS). We used national health register-data to explore whether B.1.1.7 increases the risk of COVID-19 hospitalisation.

Conclusions: Infection with lineage B.1.1.7 was associated with an increased risk of hospitalisation compared with other lineages. This finding may have serious public health impact in countries with spread of B.1.1.7 and can support hospital preparedness and modelling of projected impact of the epidemic.

(My) Diagnosis: Not good. Get vaccinated and postpone your projects for 2022.
Anonymous said…
In support of the previous comments regarding Nicaragua’s Covid-19 cases, this is to confirm that the following information on the IFR web site is false:
According to the online document 'The Archaeology of Ethnic Change In Pre-Columbian Nicaragua' (1),
“At present (December 2020), Nicaragua has had a very minimal impact from the pandemic, and a recent report from an independent COVID team reports only about 35 cases in the past month from the entire country”.
According to the Nicaraguan Ministry of Health (MINSA), between December 1st and December 30th, 2020 there were in effect 208 new cases (increase from 5,838 to 6,046). This is further confirmed by the increase in the number of active cases/# of infected people for this time period (1452 to 1656). If “in the past month” means November 2020, the numbers were even higher at 270 reported cases. (2).
It is unclear who are IFR’s or Dr. Geoffrey McCafferty’s “independent COVID team”, but it is extremely improbable that an independent source will report numbers 6-7 times lower than the ones officially reported by the government. As a matter of fact, all independent public health groups report numbers 2-3 times higher than the official MINSA numbers (3).
The Worldmeter’s graphs, which are based on MINSA data, currently show a gradual increase in cases throughout the country. The unexplained sharp drop in active cases between October 5th (2,106 cases) and October 6th (886 cases), strongly supports the prevalent claims that the actual infection and death numbers are being downplayed by the Nicaraguan government.
I cannot say if IFR/University of Calgary/Connecticut College are truly deceiving the public or are being negligent with their data verification. Notwithstanding, the information they present to students is verifiably false and should not be used when making informed decisions about internship attendance this summer.

Sources:
(1) https://ifrglobal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/IFR-Nicaragua-2021-Syllabus.pdf
(2) https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/nicaragua/
(3) https://observatorioni.org/estadisticas-covid-19-nicaragua/
Anonymous said…
IFR tweet

“Today and every day we are dedicated to uplifting women to share in the joys of research, science, and education, and by doing so developing an inclusive and accessible system that is rooted in equity.”

@Tell that to those women who were sexually assaulted by your director and staff in your field schools.
Anonymous said…

The overall expectation is that Biden’s/Cardona’s proposed overhaul of Trump’s/DeVos’s Title IX regulations will offer better protection measures for students in archaeological field schools. In particular, universities should no longer be allowed to ignore sexual misconduct that occurred in off-campus activities and study abroad programs. In order to enforce best practices, the overhaul may reinstate independent investigations and sanctions like funding cuts on schools that mismanaged Title IX complaints. Still not clear, though, what will be the level of protection for those students who participate in programs that are operated by a third-party operator like the IFR. At the moment this level of protection is minimal to none, as we all sadly witnessed in the case of those who were harassed in their field schools in Peru.
Willeke Wendrich assured the UCLA community that the IFR board investigates and that the respective Title IX offices are alerted. With that, it is evident that the IFR board is disqualified to conduct such delicate investigations due to lack of relevant training and conflict of interest, predominantly if the accused is a staff member who was “vetted” by that board. Moreover, exposing cases of sexual misconduct in their programs is bad for business and can have adverse effects on their revenue and reputation.
Informing the universities of the offenders is equally futile, as revealed by the attempt of “Student No. 3” to gain some measure of justice from UCSB’s Title IX office and Chancellor Yang. The school ignored her pleas by citing a jurisdictional loophole in which UCSB could not be held accountable for sexual assault that took place in a program operated by a third-party such as IFR, even if it concerned one of their faculty.
This case truly exposes the risk that students participating in third-party operated programs are still facing, and one that not a single UCSB or IFR representative properly addressed yet. Once again, it is hoped that the new Cardona overhaul will have a satisfactory fix to that loophole, but until then I urge students to be cognizant of the risks and limits to their rights when they participate in such archaeological field schools.
Anonymous said…
https://ifrglobal.org/program/nicaragua-granada/
The Nicaragua: Granada field school is now marked as Program Full, and yet they didn’t fix the falsehoods on the syllabus regarding the actual reported COVID numbers for the country
https://ifrglobal.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/IFR-Nicaragua-2021-Syllabus.pdf
Last accessed March 10, 2021 @ 12:34 pm.
“At present (December 2020), Nicaragua has had a very minimal impact from the pandemic, and a recent report from an independent COVID team reports only about 35 cases in the past month from the entire country”
When in fact, the nicaraguan government and independent organizations report numbers between 6 to 12 times HIGHER for December 2020
https://observatorioni.org/estadisticas-covid-19-nicaragua/
We want this to be on record, in case something bad happens to those students and they or their loved ones will want to sue for negligence

¡La información salva vidas!
Anonymous said…
These last commentaries strongly reinforce what we’ve been saying for years, and that is the IFR peer-review is one big sham. I am counting 8 board of governors and 14 academic board executives, and not a single one caught that these covid numbers were grossly underestimated? At the very least they could have glanced at the CDC or US embassy websites and realize that these level 4 countries are the last place to promote and recruit for new field schools. And mind you, all this whilst knowing perfectly well that at the present time even their own departments would NEVER EVER endorse such programs to their students.
Here’s the thing, folks. Unlike other federal or private granting-making agencies, IFR “peer-review” process is not, and could never be impartial. This is mainly because its executives have a vested interest that the organization will survive and prosper, and this can only happen if enough field schools are approved and populated with paying students. In other words, on any given year NSF review boards can afford to reject each and every proposal if these are not good enough; IFR does not.
One of their (former) field school PI’s once compared their vetting to corporate boards who first go through the motion of assessing a potential business partner. Maybe. I think of it more like those predatory journals, which only pretend to review or at best lower standards just enough so they can fill in an issue with fee-paying articles. Whatever this is, it is ABSOLUTELY NOT how a bona fide scholarly peer-review works and they know it.
Also unlike other granting agencies, the same academics who review their peers are also those who (self-) regulate and investigate any emerging issues. Imagine, if you will, a hiring committee and Title IX officers merged into one. What none of us realized till recently is how some of these key IFR executives are so unashamedly embedded in each other’s past misconduct and financial wheeling and dealings, which must compromise the inner workings of this pseudo-vetting even further.
I’m sorry, but the deep shite they’re stuck in now is a direct result of this fundamentally flawed quality assurance in picking their bedfellows. But the most tragic part? Only too late are we realizing that it is not just the research that suffers, but also our students.
Anonymous said…
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS LEARN ABOUT A FUTURE IN ARCHAEOLOGY FROM GRADUATE STUDENT MENTORS
https://www.ioa.ucla.edu/content/undergraduate-students-learn-about-future-archaeology-graduate-student-mentors
What a brilliant idea! Or potentially could have been, if the Cotsen wasn’t run by a serial enabler of sexual abusers. I hope they remember to mentor the undergrads to steer clear from her risky IFR field schools.
Anonymous said…
On this same topic (with thanks to T for the heads up)—
I don’t think this was discussed here before, but not long ago I came across this DailyBruin 2008 article “UCLA opens archaeology school in Egypt” https://dailybruin.com/2008/11/05/ucla-opens-archaeology-school-egypt
with a quote that caught my eye:
“Boytner said he helped arrange the university’s new study abroad field school program and its first Egypt program for students.
But this opportunity would not have been possible without UCLA Professor Willeke Wendrich, he said.
Wendrich is a leading Egyptologist and has close ties with the Supreme Council of Antiquities, the group allowing the students to excavate, Boytner said.
Wendrich made a deal that the council could not refuse: for every UCLA student allowed to excavate, she said she would help train one of the council’s inspectors-in-training.
The program is going to be available in fall of next year, and the application will be available next week on the UCLA Archaeology Field Programs Web site.
“There are no prerequisites; any student who wants to do it is welcome,” Boytner said.”

Which undeniably contradicts what Wendrich told the world a few months ago in the town hall.
https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html?commentPage=1
“The Institute for Field Research started at UCLA, and I was not at all involved at that point”
“Again, I wasn’t involved at that time, but I know that from 2006—actually I checked—from 2006 to 2010 the field schools ran through UCLA. It was initiative of Ran Boytner and Chip Stanish”

Yeah yeah yeah, I know I need to let it go. Then again … remembering now the straight face she wore when she denied any involvement with Boytner and the Cotsen field school program still boils my blood. Deceitfulness and lack of accountability are not the most endearing traits in a leader, and she’s still here. You’d also think that as a leading Egyptologist she’d know better than to assume that there are no historical records as to what had happened at UCLA just little over a decade ago.
Anonymous said…

These two (three with Hans) were thick as theieves from day one so nothing new here.
Anonymous said…
Nice job! I have no qualms about continuing to report on IFR. That citation of Wendrich and Boytner is great. This should not be let go. The way these corrupt individuals have conducted themselves this past year is a disgrace to the field of archaeology and its source is in the flim flam of UCLA faculty hypocrisy.
Anonymous said…
If I get this straight, in 2008 hers was the first field school in Boytner’s UCLA program and in 2011 she’s an acting faculty in the first IFR field school from where he was kicked out. Makes me wonder who was pulling whose strings.
Anonymous said…
Don’t know if anyone else noticed, but i’m fairly certain that the tweet on international women’s day was from the field school in Peru directed by Ran Boytner. i don’t know anymore if it’s sheer stupidity or they doing it out of contempt to survivors
Anonymous said…
A message to the bold PUCP students who participated in yesterday’s emotional TWITTAZO twitter campaigns
#PucpdeAgresores
#PucpEncubreACastillo
#EnVivoPucp

I hear your pain, and want to apologize for the part UCLA played in your suffering by awarding a Ph.D to Luis Jaime Castillo Butters. Charles “Chip” Stanish empowered and enabled more than one abuser during his time there, and unleashing them onto the Andean archaeological community had caused much suffering to students. His successor Willeke Wendrich aided and abetted in this shameful behavior with Gomez, Kurin, and Boytner. Your uproar last night is a reminder that none of us should keep silent in the face of abusive and enabling misconduct, regardless of how much power these individuals yield in the system.
Anonymous said…
It certainly strikes a chord. This movement is against the Catolica allowing LJC return to teaching after an investigation found he acted inappropriately with students. This is how UCSB conducted themselves with Kurin and what UCLA and IFR did with Boytner. This is institutional betrayal at its worst. Students are not just their paying customers, but these universities were entrusted with their physical and emotional well-being. What a fucking disgrace.
Anonymous said…
I am informed that IFR just opened a field school in another “Level 4” country: Croatia
https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-croatia
The Covid cases in the country are currently on the rise
https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps/countries-and-territories/croatia/
The U.S. Embassy in Croatia has announced new measures “Due to the recent rise of COVID-19 cases”
https://hr.usembassy.gov/covid-19-information-2/
Including this one:
“Funerals are limited to 25 people”
I wonder how many students typically participate in an IFR field school.
Anonymous said…

Today on
https://www.facebook.com/ifrarchaeology/

“In 2021, we will work with the Irish Archaeology Field School (Irish Heritage School) to send a 🍀 lucky 🍀 group of eager field school students abroad to study the natural landscapes in Ireland.
You can still apply for this field school here 👇https://ifrglobal.org/program/ireland-birr/”

Students should be aware that the IFR COVID page and the linked “IHS-Safe-Operating-Procedure-COVID-19” PDF were last updated on November 2020.
As of February 2021 US citizens are asked to self-quarantine for 14 days and there are travel restrictions within the country. The advertised Birr field school violates those travel restrictions. If you do not fulfil the legal requirement for mandatory quarantine you are committing an offence, and can be fined up to €2,500 or get a prison sentence of up to 6 months, or both.

For more accurate information
https://www.dfa.ie/travel/travel-advice/coronavirus/general-covid-19-travel-advisory/
https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/b4020-travelling-to-ireland-during-the-covid-19-pandemic/
https://www.gov.ie/en/campaigns/resilience-recovery-2020-2021-plan-for-living-with-covid-19/

Please act responsibly by doing your part in containing the global pandemic. Go raibh maith agaibh!
Anonymous said…

Confirmed, a field program in Croatia is on the IFR web site:
https://ifrglobal.org/program/croatia-lobor/
And what an amazing deal this is! For less than $5000, you too can help spread covid around the world!
Guilt—ridden students can donate the change to the Croatian government koronavirus campaign
https://www.koronavirus.hr/donations-462/462
Anonymous said…
This organization is not particularly known for being transparent. Just skimming the Croatia syllabus, I detected a discrepancy in the timing necessary for a negative RT-PCR test (48 hours / 72 hours). Worth reading through more carefully. Someone else noticed that the syllabus only contains the link to the European CDC concerning travel between EU countries, but no mention of the U.S. CDC website. The latter is standard for these academic travel abroad providers and at this time explicitly cautions against all travel to Croatia. As a public service, here it that link and info:
(wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-croatia)
Level 4: Very High Level of COVID-19 in Croatia
Key Information for Travelers to Croatia
Travel increases your chances of getting and spreading COVID-19. CDC recommends that you do not travel at this time.
Travelers should avoid all travel to Croatia.

I betcha this was very much a calculated omission. Linking to the cdc.gov would clearly deter any sensible student so is bad for business. Bottom line-- don’t believe everything they sell you on the internet & do your homework before you pay and travel.
Anonymous said…


Re: ignoring CDC travel guidelines, and, Kamala Harris comment from February 18 …
Another option for reporting malpractice and negligence can be CA Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who was confirmed today as the US Secretary of Health and Human Services (that also includes the CDC). Becerra should be already familiar with the IFR. Between 2017 and 2019 his officers sent two delinquency notices to IFR for failing to submit their tax records and two for violation of raffle penal codes. Receipts below.

https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=CT0174522285.pdf&document_id=09027b8f802e2d06

https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=171212Z11260034.pdf&document_id=09027b8f803094a8

https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=INSTITUTE+FOR+FIELD.pdf&document_id=09027b8f803795c6

https://rct.doj.ca.gov/Verification/Web/Download.aspx?saveas=12270134.pdf&document_id=09027b8f8038244d
Anonymous said…
This article is relevant to the Croatia field school discussion-

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.03.15.21253590v1.full.pdf

The authors argue that the majority of importations of SARS-CoV-2 in the UK over Summer 2020 were from coastal European countries, primarily Greece, Croatia, and Spain. 16-20 year old travellers are identified as the main demographic responsible for the spread across Europe. Travel restriction policies significantly reduced transmission across borders.
Ergo: Summer 2021 IFR field schools in Croatia, Spain, and the UK pose a threat for global health.

From the article-
“FINDINGS: 4,207 travel-related SARS-CoV-2 cases are identified. 51.2% (2155/4207) of cases reported travel to one of three countries; 21.0% (882) Greece, 16.3% (685) Croatia and 14.0% (589) Spain. Median number of contacts per case was 3 (IQR 1-5), and greatest for the 16-20 age-group (9.0, 95% C.I.=5.6-14.5), which saw the largest attenuation by travel restriction. Travel restriction was associated with a 40% (rate ratio=0.60, 95% C.I.=0.37- 0.95) lower rate of contacts. 827/4207 (19.7%) of cases had high-quality SARS-CoV-2 genomes available. Fewer genomically-linked cases were observed for index cases related to countries with travel restrictions compared to cases from non-travel restriction countries (rate ratio=0.17, 95% C.I.=0.05-0.52). A large travel-related cluster dispersed across England is identified through genomics, confirmed with contact-tracing data.”
“INTERPRETATION: This study demonstrates the efficacy of travel restriction policy in reducing the onward transmission of imported cases.”
“The number of onwards contacts are significantly reduced by the introduction of travel restrictions. Age is also a significant determinant of onwards contacts, with the 16-20 year old age-group representing the greatest number of travel-related cases and onwards contacts. This identifies an opportunity to direct public health awareness campaigns to younger travellers, with the intention to promote behaviours that will reduce the risk of SARS-CoV-2 acquisition and enhance compliance with quarantine on return to the UK.”
Anonymous said…


M Balter, sued for helping survivors of abuse
@mbalter

Celebrating Women in the Field Sciences
@IFRArchaeology
https://mailchi.mp/ifrglobal/celebrating-women-in-the-field-sciences...
5:03 PM · Mar 18, 2021·Twitter for iPhone

3
Likes

Dear Michael-
As much as I support celebrating this noble cause, I am extremely disappointed to see that you promoted a newsletter of an institute that was harboring known sexual aggressors and covered-up for their offenses for many years. Female students who went to their field trips were sexually harassed and assaulted and others were bullied and traumatised. At least two of these “female leaders” who are featured in this insulting rubbish knew about it and there is no way that the others didn’t know that something was up.
I am no longer following them so would not have seen the newsletter if it wasn’t for you tweet. I don’t know if it was irony on your part but we don’t need to help them celebrate their women enablers.
Michael Balter said…
To the previous commenter: My intention with this Tweet was to draw attention to the irony of the IFR post without commenting directly on it, since the leaders of IFR are potential witnesses in the Kurin v. Balter lawsuit.

Please remember that it is my reporting, together with the courage of the survivors, that has exposed the role of IFR in these matters in the first place. It's always best to give someone's motives the benefit of the doubt unless one has real evidence otherwise.
Anonymous said…

Dear Michael-
I fully recognise and value your efforts in exposing this organization, so my regrets if the previous comment passed as rude or unappreciative. I am largely concerned that others who see and like this would not realize who’s behind it, and possibly even cause inadvertent damage by retweeting. Students everywhere should be informed and warned about these individuals, not encouraged to work with them.
Thank you, again, for your dedication and service to survivors.
Anonymous said…
Even in the post-Boytner IFR, their devil-may-care attitude and disregard to institutional safety protocols never cease to amaze. In yesterday’s research ramp-up town hall to UCLA community, Wakimoto et alia instructed that fieldwork and community-based research will still continue remotely and that undergrads may not be added to research projects until further notice. Granted, these guidelines may change by the summer but as of now that’s definitely not how IFR-affiliated UCLA faculty are operating.
Along the same vein, earlier on I thought that Wendrich may have inherited Boytner’s and Stanish’s grudge for IEO. Now I’m starting to suspect that she has developed some sort of a superhero complex. By day—a protocol-abiding faculty at a respected public university; by night—the vigilante leader of a clandestine nonprofit which mission is to send their agents around the world to spread archaeological field schools. Too bad they may also spread the virus along with it.
Anonymous said…
Happy Women's History Month!!?? What the....? I was appalled by the hypocrisy of this jubilant pronunciamento by the IFR, an institution that has been this deeply engaged in shielding sexual predators. Lynn Dodd, Julie Stein, Jessica I. Cerezo-Román, Emily Lindsey, Mallika Sankaran, Salima Ikram and Willike Wendrich who all appear endorsing this announcement should be ashamed of themselves for participating in yet another IFR snow job....
Michael Balter said…
I want to remind everyone that I have seen no evidence that IFR and its leaders notified UCSB of the findings of its investigation of the 2018 field school events, during which at least one student was sexually assaulted by Gomez. I don’t know whether the fact that the IFR board had two University of California employees on its board made them mandated reporters, but there is no indication they did report. I asked Willeke Wendrich about this in the March 2020 report on these issues:


On March 4, as part of our email exchange, Willeke Wendrich told me the following:

"...we took a very public stance when we terminated the field school and ended all collaboration with Kurin and Gomez. Other than that, we have a duty towards our students to keep their information and privacy protected."

I then asked Wendrich where that public stance had been taken, and, if it had been published somewhere, if she could send me a link or copy of it. I asked her that because no one I have talked to had ever seen or heard of the "public stance."

At that point, Wendrich lost her temper, and responded:

"I've addressed your barrage of questions promptly, in spite of my overstuffed schedule. Let's agree that I will read any piece you want to publish to check on factual inaccuracies and leave it at that."



See https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/03/uc-santa-barbara-kept-misconduct.html
Anonymous said…
I and many other colleagues around the country did discuss this when it appeared on the blog as this was the turning point when we realized that Wendrich was obviously rattled, caught in a lie and thought she could just bs her way through this mess... Thank you for reminding us of that post especially in retrospect of this phoney WHM broadcast.
Michael Balter said…
This post from last year is also relevant to these issues:

https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/07/uc-santa-barbara-turns-back-wave-of.html
Anonymous said…
https://ioa.ucla.edu/node/463

And right on cue, all that oozing duplicity we all learned to expect from Wendrich’s CIoA director’s messages:

“Happy Women’s History Month! ... We do not know yet whether we will be able to do field work this summer. Especially for our students who are dependent on field work to finish their PhD research, we hope that this will be possible. Our first concern, however, is to protect the communities in which we work from any accidental negative consequences.”

All the while she’s hawking new IFR field schools in global communities which are, and will for a long time, waiting to get vaccinated. And just to show she’s not kidding around, there that menacing toothy grin of hers...
Anonymous said…


“Michael Balter said...
I want to remind everyone that I have seen no evidence that IFR and its leaders notified UCSB of the findings of its investigation of the 2018 field school events, during which at least one student was sexually assaulted by Gomez. I don’t know whether the fact that the IFR board had two University of California employees on its board made them mandated reporters, but there is no indication they did report”.
There were actually four University of California employees on the IFR board at the time of the 2018 events: Willeke Wendrich (UCLA), Kevin Vaughn (UC Riverside), Benjamin Porter (UC Berkley) and Danielle Kurin herself (UCSB). As far as we know none of them reported to their respective administrations. Then there’s De Leon’s little confession in the town-hall: “I will add that I did at one point go to Ran [Boytner], once I knew about the things that happened with Danielle Kurin, I went to Ran and said, you going to have to do something about this, this is not an issue that’s going to go away, and Ran didn’t, he basically circulated that information to the rest of the board but took, made no public stance on this.” What stopped De Leon, in this case, from reporting upward and outwards when he realized that Boytner just buried this vital information?
All I can say is that IFR lost many, many of their faculty supporters when they failed to release ANY public statement relating to what was unraveled in the last 12 months, including Kurin’s students’ allegations, IFR employees’ allegations, Boytner’s termination and all the other cover-ups and dirty details that were exposed in the aftermath by readers of this blog. Many of us who had stakes in this organization still feel betrayed that we had to learn about such serious concerns from this “rinky-dink” blog and yet, to this day, not even a single public squeak from that distinguished board. In my book, this level of denialism makes them no better than the Sackler family.
Anonymous said…
I was betrayed by these institutions. Last night I watched Operation Varsity Blues: The College Admissions Scandal on Netflix. Interviews cut directly into the heart of the greed and corruption of these top universities and makes it apparent what's going on with our own faculty creatures caught up in this system and how they play along with the game or fear facing exclusion from the system of favoritism. Listen to the former Deans, Admissions Directors, ACT-SAT Administrators very carefully as what they are addressing applies directly to the present UC-IFR scandal in archaeology. As I watched - in my mind - I just substituted "basketball" for "Peruvian archaeology" Ran Boytner for Rick Singer, and Donna Heinel for Willike Wendrich and it just completely fleshed out the whole situation we have all the way to the the top of the administrative food chain in exposing those who do their best to maintain invisibilty otherwise. I frequently wonder what is going on with former and present provost-vice chancellors like Scott Waugh or Emily Carter. This film really helps put it in the real geography of campuses and shows how scandal moves around the offices. Matthew Modine is understated and brilliant at the same time... I don't know how he researched the role but we all know these types in these schools, colleges and universities.
Anonymous said…
Lest we forget, there is also Boytner’s 2009 sexual misconduct at UCLA that was known to Willeke Wendrich and Lynn Dodd and maybe others on that board. This is fully confirmed by those who were around at the time.
The dames may claim that they acted in good faith when they empowered him to create the IFR, but then they did it again with Kurin when they unleashed her and Gomez Choque on unsuspecting students with a T-IX hanging over her head.
How does the old proverb go? Fool me once… shame on you. Fool me twice… shame on me for making the most harmful decisions as a professor, colleague, and board member.
Anonymous said…

To Anonymous @ March 20, 2021 at 11:46 AM:
A fitting analogy, and more than that. It’s not a fluke that a faculty from USC —the college most implicated in the admissions scandal — is the one featuring on top of the IFR Board of Governors’ page as the organization’s co-chair. It’s all about constructing a façade of prestige up front, so students and parents and professors will look no further.
One of the most fascinating moments in the Netflix reenactment was the guy who talks about the original French meaning of “prestige”: “deceit, imposture, illusion." Couldn’t have said it better.
https://www.etymonline.com/word/prestige
Anonymous said…
Haven’t yet watched the documentary, but wanted to point out that Rick Singer and his Key Worldwide Foundation came up in an earlier comment on this page. Like we all heard and read, his mock nonprofit organization was one of the ways through which Singer laundered the parents’ payments to pay himself and bribe the crooked universities, all without having to pay taxes [501(c)(3)]. There are some similarities with the Institute of Feild Research. If you read the rest of the comments here, it was demonstrated that Boytner and Bar-Zemer earned interests to the tune of 7K-9K annually on the loans they gave the foundation, and that’s on top the 80K salary that Boytner was already getting. The daughter of Bar-Zemer was given a job in the organization. The board, according to their website, donated to create scholarship for underprivileged students (but not this year, because of… COVID?). These board members then received reduction in service load from their universities and some of them received funding to run their proper field schools and advance their careers and those of their graduate students. There is enough here to make me suspect that we haven’t yet heard the whole story.
Anonymous said…

This is my favorite quote from the National Women’s History Month newsletter—

“We asked the female leaders of the IFR, our esteemed Board Members, to give examples of mentors who served as their role models and helped them define their own career trajectory and approach to leading others. Their stories highlight the salient truth that our progress and pursuit of new opportunities is deeply linked to a larger network of people who support us in exploring our potential. ”

Along these lines, here are Danielle Kurin’s mentors and role models who helped her to get to where she is today:

“My sincerest thanks to the faculty, students, and staff affiliated with the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology for magnanimously providing a sophisticated and inspirational forum for intellectual growth. Support from the Institute for Field Research enabled me to write this article. I am truly indebted to my mentors Yuval Bar Zemer, Hans Barnard, Ran Boytner, Michael DeNiro, Enmanuel Gomez, Sabine Hyland, Stella Nair, Charles Stanish, and Willeke Wendrich.”
https://ioa.ucla.edu/sites/default/files/media/assets/Backdirt2016_web.pdf

It is truly all deeply linked to a larger network of people.
Anonymous said…
This is my (un)favorite quote:
“I have been very fortunate to work with numerous talented women during the course of my career” (Lynn Dodd).
Dr. Dodd- Do you ever stop to think about that talented young woman, once your student and advisee at USC, who was sexually assaulted at the Misti fieldschool by your colleague and friend Ran Boytner? Did you ever regret snubbing the students who informed you about this horrendous incident, just so you can finish your book project with Boytner? Where were you when the traumatized student had to resort to sue Boytner and UCLA, after Title IX found him culpable but failed to keep him away from other female students as she requested? Were you at all bothered that following her ordeal, your award-winning student decided to quit archaeology and her dreams to go to graduate school?
Do you ever stop to think what could have become of THIS talented woman’s career, if only you chose to support HER instead of Boytner?
Not everyone is fortunate like you to have worked with strong female role models. She wasn’t.
Anonymous said…
Thanks again for drawing our attention to this ongoing discussion and allowing for a safe space for comments, opinions and discussion. This is exactly what was missing in those closed Facebook group of late. Boy, every time I think I’ve heard everything in this saga there are new twists and turns.
If I can make one suggestion, the link you included today on twitter sends the reader to the first page of comments
https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html?commentPage=1

I guess there is a limit of 200 comments per page, and I almost didn’t realize that there are dozens more new comments in the second page. For those of us who are not very familiar with your blog, it will be useful to include this link as well
https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html?commentPage=2

Signing off anonymously.
Michael Balter said…
Thanks for the suggestion I have added that link to a couple of tweets
Anonymous said…
Another favourite gem from that most recent bulletin to have plagued our inboxes:

“IFR is led by women who live by example and uphold strong ethics in everything they do, particularly as passionate educators and advocates for young adults becoming critical and daring thinkers.”

Once again, dear IFR, sentences like this just make your newsletters sound like Stalinist propaganda. Or more likely, as if it was written by a freshman who is trying to earn brownie points with her professors. If you also want to earn some academic credibility, better scale down the accolades a notch or two.
Anonymous said…
What particularly caught my eye was Wendrich’s left-field statement, “In addition, however, I think that kindness and trust are extremely important, because they provide the environment in which critique is useful, rather than devastating.” It didn’t make much sense in there, but then I remembered she also talked about “increasing trust” or something to that effect in her earlier Cotsen director’s message. After all that has transpired, the issue of regaining her students and colleagues trust is obviously one that is extremely important to her. As commented on before, it’s just a bit too much on the nose.
Anonymous said…
https://ifrglobal.org/program/italyincoronata/
This is very irresponsible and surprising from a group of notable scholars. As they know, Italy is experiencing another infection and death wave due to the coronavirus variants. The spike started in late February. Hospitals across the country are full and the vaccination process is very disorganized and full with corruption. With this current rate, the country will only reach the herd immunity in the end of 2021 or maybe 2022, but not June 2021. Those of us who are involved with international projects with students already annulled plans for the summer. Safety and health should come before research.
Anonymous said…
You know who else is like Rick Singer, probably even more so than Ran Boytner? Luis Jaime Castillo. In exchange for thousands of soles donations to his project (which he often funnels toward personal expenses), he wrote glowing letters of recommendation to places like UCLA for people who were not qualified by any stretch of the imagination. He even admits they would not have gotten in without his intervention to his students and even told UCLA they made a mistake in admitting a student he wrote a glowing letter of recommendation for. He also cultivated inside contacts at Stanford and Harvard (though his partner in crime Urton is now gone) to ensure that his acolytes had top billing, even to the point of the departments imposing students on advisors, leaving them with little say in who was being assigned to them. Of course it was easy to turn a blind eye to the social implications of empowering a corrupt network at the expense of many deserving Peruvians and engage in willful naïveté because of the symbiotic exchanges of prestige boosts that occurred among LJC’s network and North American and European networks. Without his foreign enablers, some naive and some Machiavellian, Castillo would not have gained so much power and so quickly.
Anonymous said…
This is a valid concern, now that we know that the variants are spreading like wildfire in Europe through travelling youth. Everyone knows that it is futile to rely on a negative test conducted three days BEFORE the students travel through international infection hubs, AKA airports. If they insist on operating field schools this summer, the IFR and similar organizations should ONLY ALLOW FULLY VACCINATED students to participate. Rutgers U is now demanding this of their Fall term students, and I suspect that other universities will follow suit. Sure, people should have the freedom to decide if they want to get vaccinated or not, as long as they stay in their own home or, in this case, their home country. But it is immoral and deadly to let those dimwats loose on other global populations that are struggling with vaccines and proper health care. If the IFR cares about global health as much as they care about collecting tuition fees, then that’s what they should do.
Anonymous said…

There is also the menace of them non-vaccinated “dimwits” catching the virus while abroad and causing more disruption to the rest of us (which is exactly what we should expect after spring break. ICYMI Lynn Swartz Dodd- just as we were getting better, USC announced yesterday that the recent outbreak of dozens of cases can be traced to an international traveler or travelers who brought the UK variant back to campus. If I find that even one of your summer school participants infected others in the community, I will make sure to serve your head on a plate to Provost Zukoski.
Anonymous said…
With the Tyndall 1.1 billion settlement following close after that of Heaps (links below), why am I not surprised that this harassment-plagued nonprofit is co-chaired by a UCLA-USC allied faculty?
The silver lining -- of sorts -- is that no matter how much they’ve tried to maneuver such an independent organization under their administration and title IX noses, sexual misconduct always finds its way to the surface. Thank you for reporting.

https://www.campussafetymagazine.com/university/usc-settlement-sex-abuse/

https://www.campussafetymagazine.com/news/university-of-california-settles-ucla-doctor-sexual-abuse-case-for-73-million/#
Anonymous said…
Wasn’t Willike’s husband leading another field school in Italy? I don’t see it on their site this year. Figures… Playing it safe and letting others gamble with theirs and students’ health.
Anonymous said…
IFR is searching for a new Ran Boytner:
https://careers.saa.org/jobs/14609197/executive-director-institute-for-field-research
Any takers?
Anonymous said…
Well maybe not quite another Boytner. They don’t even try to hide the fact that they internalized some harsh lessons, such as

“Most important is to create a work environment and culture that encourages retention of diverse and qualified staff”

“Ensure that the organization’s finances are responsibly managed, that strong controls are in place, and that financial reports and other documents are prepared in a timely and accurate manner”

“Initiate investigations and report any allegations of misconduct”

“Willingness to maintain cool, level-headed, communications with people who may be rushed, anxious, or needing clarity and calm to navigate enrollment or admission systems”

In other words, they don’t want another hotheaded racist bully harasser who fudges tax returns and won’t return students’ fees as he tries to bury incidents of sexual misconduct in the field schools. Another desired qualification is not to have a past of sexual misconduct with his field school students.
Anonymous said…

But this job description neglects to mention that the Executive Director will inherit an organization that is currently mixed up in a 10-million-dollar lawsuit* that was largely brought by the criminal negligence of its governing board. Any applicant would do well to first educate themselves.

* https://www.pacermonitor.com/public/case/34743839/Kurin_v_Balter
(See Protective Order from February 02, 2021)
Anonymous said…
I agree that the some of the language is unusual for a job ad and there is a top-down emphasis on the ED being supervised and reporting to the board of governors (usually officers like this are being “advised” by the board) Besides, I have never seen anything like the statement that “The Executive Director is reviewed quarterly” right there in the announcement. Sounds like a warning to discourage other creeps from applying.
Anonymous said…
Interesting that they are essentially searching for a manager//administrator, not an archaeologist or even an academic//degree holder. And yet, the ad was posted on the Society for American Archaeologists website. I Googled and couldn’t find it posted anywhere else except for the IFR job opportunities page. Since the type of person they are looking for will not likely to ever see this ad, this means one thing: they already have a candidate and have the ad sitting there to create the illusion of a legitimate search. I am not impressed, but certainly not surprised.
Anonymous said…
Had the exact same thought… some of these qualifications seem to be describing a known entity. Also no request for references or names, which isnt a must but is common in academic non-profit headhunting. Won’t shock me if Wendrich will soon install another one of her minions.
Anonymous said…
“climb up a small ladder to get something from a higher shelf”
Am qualified. Will apply.
Anonymous said…
No joke, with their reputation being what it is I can’t imagine any self-respecting archaeologist wanting this job. A career suicide if ever there was one
Anonymous said…
There are two scenarios as I see it. One where the applicant (or internal candidate) already knows about the IFR track record and still wants the job, in which case s/he deserves everything that’s coming her way (and I don’t mean here executive salary and benefits.) The other possibility is that s/he is unaware. In this case, the obligation of the community is to warn her. The last scenario is what happened when Ran Boytner notified his “colleagues” that Guilia Saltini has accepted the executive director job at his new rival organization. It took some urgent communications from some of these colleagues, but at the end she realized she is making a huge mistake and refused his offer.
Anonymous said…
Oh no, I just realized something. Is Dr. Giulia Saltini Semerari the internal candidate? She is one of the directors of their Italy:Incoronata field school. She clearly doesn’t care about student safety with the corona situation in her country so already in sync with the IFR. It would'nt be beyond them to get back at Boytner for his little stunt.
Anonymous said…
You know who’d be just perfect for this position? Rick Singer. He’s available, has plenty of experience in educational non-profits, and is excellent with fundraising from anxious parents. Best part, since telecommuting is allowed he can run the IFR from his prison cell.
Anonymous said…
“But this job description neglects to mention that the Executive Director will inherit an organization that is currently mixed up in a 10-million-dollar lawsuit* that was largely brought by the criminal negligence of its governing board. Any applicant would do well to first educate themselves.”

With you 100%!! The past and present legal record of an organization is one of those important aspects that most job applicants neglect to check, even though often all it takes is a quick web search. The topic has been discussed ad nauseam in whisper networks including the comment sections of this blog, but, with this report of a new director search it may be worth reiterating that two of these IFR board members are also named by the plaintiff and defendant in the former director’s sexual harassment/battery/emotional distress/negligence lawsuit that also implicated UCLA.
What was hardly covered here are the other lawsuits involving IFR students from 2020— two where the IFR was suing a student and one, still ongoing, where a student is suing the IFR (with future hearings in 2021 and 2023.)
All these can be viewed by any member of the public through the Superior Court of California web page
www.lacourt.org/paonlineservices/pacommerce/login.aspx?appId=CDX&casetype=CIV
Under “Continue as Guest”, type “Boytner” under Last Name and “Ran” under First Name to see the documents from the first case. And “Institute for Field Research” under Company Name to see those from the other three cases.
There is a fee for the docket and to download each document, but if you are a hopeful candidate you should consider this a small price to pay in order to avoid making the wrong career choice.
Anonymous said…
So there are rumors that Danielle Kurin got inspired by IFR’s tax-exempt status and is launching her own nonprofit:
https://aftpoc.org/
Copyright © 2020 Alliance For The Prevention Of Cyberbullying - All Rights Reserved. We are 501(c)(3) application pending Non-Profit. If approved, your donations are tax deductible.

This new twist re-reminds me of that “Cyberbullying and the IFR” hokum Boytner’s emailed us last year. I wonder if they are still in cahoots.
Anonymous said…
Apologies if this off topic, but I would like to echo the grievances of the anonymous colleague from March 26, 2021 at 1:19 AM referencing Luis Jaime Castillo. It is true what they say that one bad apple can rot an entire fresh bowl. Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about the ripple effect such rotten individuals have on our student placement and teaching, and institutional research and reputation. For this last year the Andean archaeology community became very familiar with some of these bad apples: Gary Urton, Luis Jaime Castillo, Danielle Kurin, Enmanuel Gomez Choque, Ran Boytner, and - as much as it hurt me and others to admit - John Janusek. Each culpable in their own way, but all having one thing in common: they were empowered by an enabling system. PUCP knew about LJC (and now even more after the investigation), Harvard knew about Urton, UCSB knew about Kurin and Gomez, UCLA/IFR knew about Boytner, Kurin and Gomez, and Vanderbilt knew about Janusek.
Some statements were made by community members, but not followed vigorously enough.
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1008&context=andean_past_special
From my perspective, the only way to force change and stomp out this cancer of complicity is by hitting the enabling institutions where it hurts them most - their funding. The following news of last week may serve as a warning or a wakeup call for such institutions.
“Melbourne University loses funding partner over sexual harassment case”
April 2, 2021
https://www.smh.com.au/business/workplace/melbourne-university-loses-funding-partner-over-sexual-harassment-case-20210402-p57g3r.html
“A major funding partner of the University of Melbourne, US-based Bloomberg Philanthropies, has withdrawn its support after revelations about the university’s secretive handling of a sexual harassment investigation into a high-profile academic.”
“In an email sent on Friday to project partners – including the World Health Organisation – Bloomberg Philanthropies said it had learnt the details of Ms Frederes’ complaint and the results of the investigation after The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald ’s report.”
““When we learnt of these details, and of University of Melbourne’s failure to issue a punishment commensurate with its findings, we quickly began efforts to end our partnership with them. Those efforts are now finalised.”
“Ms Frederes decided to speak out about her experience in March because she could not see any evidence the university had taken any action against Professor Lopez in light of Ms Bryant-Smith’s findings.”
“In a recent email to staff in the wake of the revelation about the investigation into Professor Lopez’s alleged conduct, vice-chancellor Duncan Maskell committed the university to doing “much better” in this area and as part of that was in the process of developing standalone policies on sexual assault and harassment.”
“Complaints about sexual harassment would also now be handled centrally at the university rather than by separate schools and departments, Professor Maskell said.”
Anonymous said…
Sigh. Once again, I open my browser this morning to a total disconnect….

facebook.com/ifrarchaeology/
“Connecting with other people from worlds away and immersing in their culture is one of the most authentic and mutually beneficial experiences one can hope to have during their undergrad and beyond!
We recently opened another summer 2021 field school in the Himalayas so there are plenty of spots left to apply for now!”

https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/05/india/india-second-wave-covid-intl-hnk/index.html
“India reports new record of 103,558 daily Covid cases, as second wave and new lockdowns hit”
“India has plunged into its second wave -- and this time, with new variants, fatigue setting in among the population, and several massive religious gatherings taking place, it threatens to be worse than the first one.”

facebook.com/cnn/
“Experts say the highly contagious B.1.1.7 variant is changing the coronavirus pandemic's playbook and could spell trouble for younger groups that haven't yet been vaccinated”
Anonymous said…
"Money makes the world go around,
The world go around,
The world go around,
Money makes the world go around,
Of that we can be sure."
Anonymous said…
My thought exactly, they have to pay that loan somehow. I’m expecting for the announcement of a new IFR field school in Brazil any day now.
Anonymous said…
www.wsj.com/articles/covid-19s-ground-zero-shifts-to-india-11617634554
They clearly do not read the news or update their pages, which poses a real danger to those students who readily trust the information on their website. Under Travel Info in this new India page, "We expect the current circumstances will
change as the vaccination program progresses
and travel opens up. We are hopeful that by
April the country will open to international travel
in all respects”.
Right now, April 6, India is the #1 global ground zero for the virus with cases through the roof and stringent lockdowns and travel restrictions.
Anonymous said…
Danielle Kurin
Jason de Leon
Ran Boytner
Willeke Wendrich
Charles Stanish
Lynn Dod
Fred Limp
Julia Stein
All key figures in the UCSB/UCLA/IFR scandals, are conspicuously absent from this year’s SAA program. I checked and IFR is not listed in the virtual exhibit hall either, and I always saw them at the conferences. I find it all very curious, bearing in mind this year’s virtual format which makes it very accessible (and very cheap) and thus presents an opportunity to reach even more students and colleagues globally. Thoughts?
Anonymous said…
Hmmm.... I wonder if it has anything to do with that special SAA Presidential Session on the impacts of inequality and harassment on the practice of archaeology organized by Amber VanDerwarker and Maureen Myers. Those who are not members can see it reported in the Balter Twitter feed.
Michael Balter said…
See also the updates for this new blog post:

https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2021/04/fighting-harassment-and-bullying-in.html
Anonymous said…
As everyone at the Cotsen knows, these India field schools are headed by a former student of Willeke Wendrich so maybe that’s why no one says anything.
I didn’t think I’d say it, but I’m with the university on this one: this summer is way too early for international fieldwork. What we need is to dispatch doctors with vaccines, not students with trowels. Even if we follow CDC’s new recommendations and require all team members to get fully vaccinated before travel (which I note the IFR does not do), research shows that vaccinated people can still get infected and can still infect others, with emerging Covid variants making the situation much more unpredictable. The contagion risks, while significantly reduce with vaccines, are still real and should not be imposed on unvaccinated populations. And with hordes of tourists preparing to overrun developing countries this summer, I fear that flaunting vaccine passports will only exacerbate structural inequalities between the Global North and South and end up being yet another tool to justify American entitlement and imperialism. (Just to be clear I am not against vaccine passports, just caution that these will serve to rationalize putting vulnerable communities at risk.)
Anonymous said…

RE the SAA absentee list, Jason De León rescinded his membership after the Yesner controversy. You remember… when Balter actually did what De León failed to do to at the IFR… protect the victims of sexual harassment...
Not one bit surprised about Danielle Kurin and Ran Boytner avoiding conferencing after everything we now know (and I understand that Boytner went as far as to delete his online academic and professional profiles.)
As for the others I agree it’s quite bizarre. When was the last time “President Emeritus” Fred Limp failed to attend an SAA meeting as either speaker/discussant/committee/task force member, and this with him being such a vocal proponent of sharing knowledge across virtual platforms?
Nah, something’s up and the general consensus is that they try to keep a low profile while waiting for the lawsuit to resolve or at least after their depositions or discovery phase, perhaps at the lawyers’ orders (the Kurin v. Balter legal docket shows IFR and UCLA entered the proceedings as third parties on February 02 and 18, 2021; https://www.pacermonitor.com/public/case/34743839/Kurin_v_Balter).
Maybe Balter, if it doesn’t compromise him legally, can shed more light?
Michael Balter said…
Re the previous comment:

I appreciate the interest with which the community is following the Kurin v. Balter litigation. I would love to be able to say more, but at this stage in the proceedings I’m afraid I cannot. But it is a good idea to keep a close eye on the court docket, and on recent posts on this blog.
Anonymous said…
Mary Leighton—Performative Informality Hurts Everyone: Getting to the
Root of Intersectional Inequalities in Archaeology

Pleased to see Leighton featuring at the aforementioned SAA session on inequity and harassment in archaeology. As discussed in detail numerous comments ago, Leighton participated in Ran Boytner’s field school in Chile and had quite a few things to say (and publish) about what was going on. I will not be able to personally attend because of a conflicting session, but I hope this will be recorded and available for view before or after the conference.
Anonymous said…
The fact that the presidential session is being sponsored at all is a testament to the fact that the only way to induce real change in this administrative atmosphere is to apply the tactics that Michael Balter has deployed in these situations. Anyone who has been ushered out of administrative offices and into HR where complaints are summarily dismissed is fully aware of what's been going on here. Balter should get all the credit he deserves for his action. None of this would be taking place if he hadn't set up this platform for us all to report on the IFR and UCLA.
Anonymous said…
It may interest your readers that Kurin is no longer an SAA member. I do not know why. I believe she was last year and was scheduled to copresent in an Andean session, but then the whole conference was canceled. The same session is offered again this year, but without the paper of Kurin and her colleagues.
Anonymous said…
Looks like Chip Stanish has also failed to renew his membership, or at least “There are no records” of him on the SAA directory. He too was listed as discussant and committee member (x2) in the 2020 program.
Upholding professional membership is important to service and most faculty do not simply withdraw to save a buck, so it's suspicious to say the least.
Anonymous said…
Another thought on the absentees:
Remember that when people signed up for this meeting we still assumed there’s a chance this will be in person, so they likely wanted to avoid the hassle of awkward bar conversations. I’ve seen it before.
Anonymous said…
Anonymous said
“Balter should get all the credit he deserves for his action. None of this would be taking place if he hadn't set up this platform for us all to report on the IFR and UCLA.”

Hear! Hear! Even if they won’t admit it, many of the new SAA anti-harassment policies stemmed out of Yesner’s public exposure in 2019. The fact that our leadership opted not to re-invite Balter, who indeed deserves all the credit, but instead populated this panel with some of his critics (as those who follow them on social media know,) speaks volumes to the integrity of the Society. This is as cowardly as Jason de Leon publically denouncing the SAA *and* Balter, when he himself has contributed nothing except for attempting to undermine the survivors’ voices in this blog. I guess if I was a coward I too would have cancelled my membership, but I still believe that the only way to fight harassment and corruption is from within.
Michael Balter said…
Many thanks for the kind and supportive words. I hope most here have seen a recent blog post in which I describe what really happened with the Yesner episode, which has been the subject of many false rumors (disappointing that so many have chosen to believe them.)

https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2021/04/the-misadventures-of-metoo-reporter.html
Anonymous said…
HOW ON EARTH IS BOYTNER STILL A MEMBER?
Aren’t we all required now to declare that we have never been subject to adverse findings from administrative complaint or harassment lawsuit?
To remind the SAA… according to UCLA records, Boytner was found accountable for violating the faculty code of conduct policy (“types of unacceptable conduct”), after he attempted to engage in a romantic/sexual relationship with his field school student without her consent. According to the victim, he actually harassed and sexually assaulted her and caused her lasting emotional distress. The disciplinary sanctions taken against him included terminating his involvement with his field school, banning him from direct contact with students without a third party present, and requiring him to undergo a mandatory sexual harassment training. Not long after, he was fired from UCLA. The harassed student also sued him (and UCLA) in civil court, and the case was settled in her favor. All this is well documented; some can even be found online.
What more do you need?
Anonymous said…
Fee-paying members and especially early-career scholars deserve more than another presidential session that reports of another survey results that indicate there is a growing body of evidence to suggest that harassment in archaeological contexts may be a problematic behavior that can have a detrimental effect on early-career scholars…. What we really need is an organization that sets an example and purges all documented harassers out of its ranks ASAP, along with their enabling entourage.
Michael Balter said…
Re the above comment: my own experience with these kinds of sessions is that the people who attend are the ones who need to hear itt the least and the ones who need to hear the most don’t attend.
Anonymous said…
SAA executives regularly post the minutes of their board meetings and are accessible to all members (go to “Board Actions” in your member portal.) I occasionally read those and noticed that since Albuquerque they’re trying to be more transparent about such issues, and I’ve seen at least two recent motions where they barred members from meeting participation for violating the SAA bylaws/policies/principles (one of these guys even made the news.) So I got curious to see if any of the above was mentioned, but for some reason the SAA stopped posting their minutes in March 2020, that is, right about the time that Balter started reporting on this multi-institutional coverup. Another coincidence?
Anonymous said…
This may explain what’s behind one or two of the above-discussed absences.

“SAA Board Policies”

Article IX: Meetings and Voting, Section 4 of the SAA Bylaws states:
Upon being presented with credible evidence that an individual has been found, by a court of competent jurisdiction or an administrative or regulatory body, to have engaged in conduct or actions contrary to the ideals, objectives, and accepted standards of the Society as set forth in these Bylaws, Board policies, or the SAA Principles of Archaeological Ethics, the Board may bar that individual from attending the Annual Meeting and other SAA-sponsored events.
Such conduct or action shall include, but is not limited to, sexual assault and harassment.

Registrants for the SAA Annual Meeting are required to self-certify as follows:
I am not and have not ever been the subject of adverse findings from a discrimination or harassment lawsuit or administrative complaint; and
I have not been found at fault in a disciplinary action, such as suspension or termination of registration resulting from a Register of Professional Archaeologists’ grievance investigation.
Michael Balter said…
Re the previous comment, one would hope that the SAA and other organizations, in the interests of transparency, would inform its members if indeed such action had been taken.
Anonymous said…
This motion is also interesting:

“In response to concerns and in consultation with new legal counsel, the SAA Board voted on July 29, 2019, to adopt a revised self-certification on the 2020 Call for Submissions. The revision drops the language requiring meeting registrants to authorize SAA to be able to run a background check. For those who previously checked the earlier version, the consent to a criminal background check that is implied by clicking the box at the bottom of the introductory page will not be used by the SAA. However, the SAA reserves the right to REQUEST a voluntary background check and to use other means necessary to guarantee the safety of members attending the annual meeting.”

Is it time to REQUEST that of some members, SAA?
Anonymous said…
For those who haven’t yet seen the disturbing documentary Roll Red Roll (available on Netflix) [1], it is highly recommended and bears many similarities to the cases covered on this blog. It focuses on the case of “Jane Doe”, a high school student who was sexually assaulted under the heavy influence of alcohol. What I found interesting is that it was a Blogger, Alexandria Goddard, who realized the severity of the crime, conducted the initial investigation, and broke the story to the public [2]. Much like Balter, Goddard soon found herself declared a cyberbully and then sued for defamation, along with several anonymous commenters on her blog who supported her plea for due process (The defamation case was settled in favour of Goddard and the commenters [3]). Most crucially, Goddard’s reporting was soon vindicated with the help of other anonymous tipsters, investigative reporters, MeToo activists, concerned community members, and other survivors [4]. By virtue of the public attention brought by the lawsuit, the full nature of the institutional complicity in the coverup of this and even earlier harassment cases at this school was further exposed with the help of the mainstream media [5].
The main difference is that in the “Jane Doe” case the perpetrators eventually showed remorse for their actions, and were sentenced to juvenile detention; some of their institutional enablers either resigned, did community service, or served a sentence [6]. In this case, the perpetrators are walking free, continue to teach, and are luring more students into their trap. Something needs to change.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roll_Red_Roll
https://youtu.be/5v1iUSyViyo
[2] https://www.insideedition.com/how-one-crime-blogger-helped-expose-steubenville-high-school-rape-51553
[3] https://www.acluohio.org/archives/press-releases/settlement-reached-in-case-protecting-anonymous-speech-of-online-commenters
[4] https://socialistworker.org/2013/03/19/voices-raised-in-steubenville
[5] https://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/17/sports/high-school-football-rape-case-unfolds-online-and-divides-steubenville-ohio.html
[6] http://prinniefied.com/wp/2019/06/18/steubenville-case-where-are-they-now/
Anonymous said…
I, for one won’t miss them at the SAA. I don’t know the other board members, but I can tell you that Ran Boytner’s “legacy” to the IRF is that many former and potential program directors would never work with that “academic” organization ever again.
Anonymous said…
I posted the comment below on another page of this blog, but seeing that it may be relevant to this discussion, perhaps the moderator will allow to reproduce it here.

Anonymous said…

What can I say, there’s strength in numbers even among victimizers. A necessary reminder that it was again Ran Boytner who first sympathized with disgraced archaeologist David Yesner as a victim of Balter, in his May 11, 2020 letter to colleagues cited below. This was over a month before Kurin repeated the same claim in her complaint, while adding other known academic harassers to her list.

“From: Ran Boytner
Date: Mon, May 11, 2020 at 2:07 PM
Subject: Cyberbullying and the IFR”
“…During the 2019 Society for American Archaeology annual meeting in Albuquerque (NW), Balter was eject from the meeting by the SAA board for bullying behavior. I have been a member of the SAA for almost 30 years and never heard of such ejection in the past. I am not sure Balter is allowed back to the SAA but given his cyberbullying activity, I venture to guess that he may not be allowed to come back...”

Boytner’s allegations of bullying directly contradict the testimony of numerous conference goers, who witnessed Balter standing up for harassment survivors by escorting Yesner out of the building without the use of physical force. The SAA leadership misinterpreted the situation at the time, and removed Balter from the meeting while letting Yesner to return. This resulted in a tremendous backlash against the organization’s response, which was already well documented and publicized by the time Boytner and Kurin made the above claims. In the Member Needs Assessment survey of January 2020, 57% of SAA members reported being unsatisfied with the SAAs response to Yesner’s presence in that meeting and the leadership failure to protect Yesner’s sexual harassment survivors who attended the meeting. Of those who considered cancelling their membership because of “incidents regarding sexual harassment at SAA2019”, 27% self-identify as women, 39% as students and 41% in the age group 18-34.
It is therefore shocking that both Boytner and Kurin will continue to sympathize with Yesner and peddle such horrendous lies, especially in the face of the overwhelming counter-reaction from the archaeological community. I therefore propose that the SAA will immediately revoke the membership of any archaeologist who publicly sympathizes with known sexual predators.
January 20, 2021 at 5:46 PM
Anonymous said…
Michael-
Anything you can report back from last week's mediation conference call?
Michael Balter said…
Unfortunately, the mediation process is strictly confidential under federal rules of civil procedure and I can’t say anything about it right now. Thanks for your interest. I hope to be able to say more about the case soon.
Anonymous said…
See this public thread concerning one of the SAA members who was banned in 2019
https://twitter.com/SAAorg/status/1197997361475260416
It appears that his membership was also revoked or voluntarily withdrawn. Maybe this can account for Kurin’s absence this year, maybe not. As for Boytner, from my understanding the SAA were aware of his transgressions for some time now, so good question why they didn’t do anything (or maybe they did and we weren’t informed; see last comment om the thread.) Or perhaps certain influential board members pulled strings to conceal it there too, like at UCLA and IFR?
Anonymous said…
Would this symposium be a good place to raise the issue?

Increasing Transparency in the SAA
Thursday, April 15 - 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM EDT
Anonymous said…

Like many Covid-deniers in the US, the IFR keeps announcing new field schools in India and elsewhere as if there is no pandemic:

@IFRArchaeology
“We developed short 2-week field schools with the idea in mind that creating accessible and unique field work opportunities is a crucial step towards promoting diversity, equity and accessibility in field school education by using economies of scale. Check them out on our website!”

While meanwhile in the real world:

“India overtakes Brazil to become the second-worst hit country as Covid cases soar”
https://www.cnbc.com/2021/04/12/coronavirus-india-becomes-second-worst-hit-country-as-covid-cases-surge.html

“India's daily virus infections are world's highest but crowds gather for festival”
https://www.reuters.com/article/health-coronavirus-india/update-1-indias-coronavirus-tally-overtakes-brazil-thousands-join-ritual-bath-idUSL1N2M507A

“As India’s second wave of infections builds, with fewer than 4% estimated to have been vaccinated among a population of 1.4 billion, experts say the situation could have a long way to go before it starts getting better.”
Anonymous said…

Just now… One of the conclusions at Meyers’ and VanDerwarker’s excellent paper at the SAA Presidential Session WHAT IS AT STAKE? THE IMPACTS OF INEQUITY AND HARASSMENT ON THE PRACTICE OF ARCHAEOLOGY

“Private organizations, like the IFR, need to require evidence of training received by instructors and/or provide training for instructors and students as well.”

This is an excellent session attended by many, many SAA members, so I appreciate the presenters for publicly calling out the IFR!
Michael Balter said…
Re the last comment, very interesting. I’ve only seen the abstract to this paper, if it were possible to post more of it and or more of a description of what happened at that session I would be grateful and I think others would be too.
Anonymous said…
Interesting indeed! If IFR will act in accordance with with these recommendations, this in itself will be a small victory for survivors who reported but an enormous service to all future students in their programs.
Anonymous said…
So they’re saying essentially that if IFR had done their due diligence and required evidence of sexual harassment training from their PI’s, what happened at Kurin’s field school could have been prevented. Maybe so, but in my opinion this still does not absolves VanDerwarker/UCSB from the oversight of letting Kurin direct a field school with IFR in the first place (which they knew about), when she was still under forced administrative leave at her home institution. Sounds like they’re trying to deflect the liability, much like their T-IX office did with the complaint of the assaulted student.
Anonymous said…
My ears perked up when I heard it too. Made it even more significant since I don’t think they named any other organization in a negative connotation throughout the entire presentation, so that in itself was a strong statement against the IFR. But other than that there was no talk about Kurin or any of that affair. Their main gist was that training is necessary to reduce harassment and assault, which is a given but was supported by the SCA/SEAC surveys. Another noteworthy finding was the low rate of reporting among students who experienced/witnessed harassment, but no alternative reporting outlets like social media and/or blogs like this one were mentioned. I spotted one attendee who asked in the chat about a neutral or anonymous platform to report problematic field schools, but didn’t seem like anyone responded to that. (The chat function was not anonymous and way too busy for my taste).
Then everyone got distracted by the anti-NAGPRA talk in another session, and which I suspect will be the focus of discussion in days and weeks to come.
Anonymous said…
Joe acknowledged the 2019 issues and the steps SAA has taken to increase participants’ safety. I’m not entirely clear about the role of the Finding verification committee. The committee is charged with verifying the credibility of evidence in regards to members’ misconduct, but does not have the authority to receive reports independently or to initiate inquiries with respect to any individual or group? Will need to check on that.
Mary Leighton discussion on "performative informality" was superb with lots of stimulating exchange in the chat. She’s the only one who actually brought up Urton, as an illustration that we should not be focusing necessarily on the “bad apples” (or “horny men who cannot control their lust/gross creepy men” as she so eloquently puts it) but on the structural problems and power relations that underlie academia and create harassment and gender-based discrimination.
There was some useful exchange of articles and resources on the chat, so hope they make these available later on.
Other than that the session was, yes, important, but beyond boilerplate recommendations I’m not sure what actual good will come of it. Students and ECRs need real actions, not another hypothetical list of action items.
Anonymous said…
https://saa2021.conferencecontent.net/sessions/5151
The recording of the SAA presidential session is now posted on the conference platform, and the below quote is accurate:
“Private organizations, like the IFR, need to require evidence of training received by instructors and/or provide training for instructors and students as well.” (1:15:45 / -1:01:35)
VanDerwarker and Meyers were co-chairs of the session with Watkins so, yes, I would agree that this was definitely a society-wide finger-pointing rather than just a passing remark.
They also preface their recommendations with the following:
“Different entities have different responsibilities in their missions, but each can take steps that will have moral long-term preventative value than basic steps that protect themselves from legal exposure” (1:14:55).
The paper by Colaninno et al. is also relevant to this question of ensuring basic safety measures for students in archaeological field schools.
I think every SAA member who missed this session should make the time to watch it.
Anonymous said…
Here’s what I find interesting. Their recommendations are aimed at five broad institutional categories:
1. Colleges and Universities
2. Professional Organizations
3. Private Organization
4. Large CRM Firms
5. Small CRM Firms
And yet, IFR is the ONLY INSTITUTION they singled out. This is quite serious, so I wonder if there will be any formal response from IFR leadership (& please post here if you see any)
Anonymous said…
Meyers & VanDerwarker raise an important question that’s brought up before on this post thread but we haven’t seen any good answer for. … why don’t the IFR require background check or evidence of harassment training from field instructors and staff? How else would an organization know they’re not sending students to an isolated field camp with a sexual predator or worse? This is an elementary prerequisite for higher education, and most of their faculty associates would have had to go through the verification process anyway. My theory is that if they would have done so, then Boytner sexual harassment case would have become public knowledge.
Michael Balter said…
I still have not been able obtain a detailed version of the VanderWarker-Meyer talk at SAA. If anyone took good notes and wants to post a synopsis of what was said and the discussion afterwards, that would be welcome. With thanks.
Michael Balter said…
Whoops, sorry for the misspellings of their names.
Anonymous said…
Anonymous said...
"My theory is that if they would have done so, then Boytner sexual harassment case would have become public knowledge"
This very likely is the reason. Boytner was also a field school director at the IFR, so any background check would have definitely applied to him as well. Even if he lied about it, those records could have been requested from UCLA by a California Public Records Act request and the lawsuit accessed directly from the CA Civil Court website.
Anonymous said…
Boytner is back with one or more field school operations. Below are some preliminary details, and more information will be soon released to the (very concerned) public.

The address
11209 NATIONAL BLVD, STE 137, LOS ANGELES, CA 90064
is listed under the following three companies/organizations

1. TWIN CAIRNS, LLC/FIELD EXPEDITIONS REVIEW
2. ANTHROPOCENE TRUST
3. CENTER FOR FIELD SCIENCES

TWIN CAIRNS, LLC is a “Domestic Limited-Liability Company” active since October 2, 2020 (File Number: 202028110180)
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=202028110180-29084664

TWIN CAIRNS, LLC agent is “ACAP Accounting Services.” They describe their services as “Employment board” and “Job board & science review”
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=202028110180-29234226
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=202028110180-29101625

The “doing business as” name of TWIN CAIRNS, LLC is FIELD EXPEDITIONS REVIEW
https://opengovus.com/los-angeles-business/0003215448-0001-0
“The business activity is data processing, hosting, & related services”

Christopher Dore, former President of the Register of Professional Archaeologists, lists himself as a “Chief Executive Officer” of TWIN CAIRNS, LLC since October 2020
https://www.linkedin.com/in/christopherdore

However, the listed “Manager”, “Officer” and “Owner” for TWIN CAIRNS, LLC is ANTHROPOCENE TRUST
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=202028110180-29234226

On the Register of Professional Archaeologists, Boytner list himself as “Director” of ANTHROPOCENE TRUST
https://rpanet.org/Sys/PublicProfile/55951484/5426137

ANTHROPOCENE TRUST recently launched this website
https://www.anthropocenetrust.org/home
(Page updated Feb. 11, 2021).
Where they described themselves as a “private, family trust formed in California… dedicated to funding research, training and publications of evidence-based science”

The third organization listed on this same address, CENTER FOR FIELD SCIENCES, is a “Domestic Nonprofit” 501(c)(3). The Company Number is C4671879. It filed for CA incorporation on 12/07/2020
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=04671879-29508751

The organization received IRS tax exemption on 03/01/2021 (EIN: 85-4119862)
https://apps.irs.gov/app/eos/detailsPage?ein=854119862&name=Center%20for%20Field%20Sciences&city=Los%20Angeles&state=CA&countryAbbr=US&dba=&type=CHARITIES,%20DETERMINATIONLETTERS&orgTags=CHARITIES&orgTags=DETERMINATIONLETTERS

The CENTER FOR FIELD SCIENCES recently launched this website
https://www.fieldsciences.org/
(Page updated Mar. 18, 2021)
Where they describe themselves as “Science Training Programs… Academic & CRM Tracks… For college students & others who seeks careers in the field sciences - in academia or the private sector… Programs will be offered for academic year 2021-22… Coming soon to a webpage near you!”
The image credit reads “Peru-Moqui 2013 #09 Credit Ran Boytner”

The URL for CENTER FOR FIELD SCIENCES is similar to the one Boytner shared earlier with colleagues (http://www.fieldscience.org), under the banner of another new field school organization, “Field Science Foundation” (details above in Balter’s update from Aug 3, 2020). As pointed out by commenters, this domain redirected to “ifrglobal.org” and the favicon was the IFR logo.

The responsible agent/director/officer for the CENTER FOR FIELD SCIENCES is “Giulia Saltini Semerari”
https://opencorporates.com/companies/us_ca/C4671879

Saltini Semerari was also named by Boytner as the Executive Director of the “Field Science Foundation.”
Currently, she is listed as a field school director for the IFR
https://ifrglobal.org/program/italyincoronata/

The above-listed physical address of all three companies/organizations is actually of another business
https://www.boxes.plus
And is most likely a private mailbox rental.
It is also across the street from IFR former offices.
Anonymous said…
Thank you for exposing this. The level of misdirection he or his new board are willing to go through in order to avoid having his name again on the organization’s façade -- for lack of a better word -- Impressive!
Anonymous said…
Everyone, quickly screenshoot all these websites before they’re gone into hiding like Kurin’s new “non profit”
Anonymous said…
Is this for real… Boynter is now running 3 “research” orgs out of a single P.O. Box?! This should be the dictionary definition of ‘fraudster.’ I just don’t get what otherwise good folks like Chris Dore associate themselves with this smoke and mirrors.
Anonymous said…
UCLA, USC, IFR: Now you see what happens when you simply pass the harasser?
https://www.chronicle.com/article/pass-the-harasser-is-higher-eds-worst-kept-secret-how-can-colleges-stop-doing-it/
Three magic words: “do not rehire.”
Anonymous said…
If you go to 11209 National Blvd on Google maps street view (https://goo.gl/maps/7djBUtyoutph4GJ89) you can see clearly that there is no “STE 137”. It’s just the Boxes Plus store. I know that home-based businesses often use p.o.b. services as their publicly-listed street address. But I find it misleading to portray a place of business as a “suite” when it’s actually just a mailbox, especially when it comes to official government records.
Anonymous said…
https://testsite.usf.edu/arts-sciences/institutes/iasce/scholars/anth-working-group.aspx
Chip is heading an Institute at USF that’s also studies the anthropocene. Are we witnessing another reincarnation of the Cotsen Field School Program and IFR?
Anonymous said…
And all this while the IFR is looking for a new executive director!!! Get the popcorn ready, folks, because this will be bigger than Godzilla vs. Kong
Anonymous said…
I see that people continue to assume that Boytner’s new organizations are competing with the IFR. I am not that convinced. For example, I doubt that Saltini is playing a double game, and it is more plausible that both institutions are fully aware of her respective roles. Also, someone on fb commented that they identify images in Boytner’s new websites as being from one or more IFR field schools. I don’t see how they will allow it if they were competing. No, I think that they are still working together, just on the hush-hush.
Anonymous said…
Dore, then still with RPA, was also a discussant at that 2019 #METOO IN ARCHAEOLOGY session that Balter was unjustly blocked from presenting at. I find it ironic that the session also included three IFR board members, and less than a year later, it was Balter who exposed their #METOO violations to the entire archaeological community.
Anonymous said…
Ah…I did ask myself how Boytner could retain his RPA status with his UCLA record...and now I know
Anonymous said…
This is the video for Boytner’s “Twin Cairns, LLC” company, uploaded to Youtube December 11, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2ippglbvQQ
“Introducing TwinCairns.com, the job site supporting employees and employers in the environmental industry.”
The Domain TwinCairns.com was registered on May 4, 2020, right after he was kicked out of the IFR. Currently the site is not active.
Anonymous said…

The logo of Twin Cairns, LLC reminds me of the one for Sea Level Consulting, LLC
http://www.sealevelsitka.com/
Anonymous said…
It is upsetting to see Christopher Dore dragged into this. This whole mess is like a black hole that sucks in good but perhaps too gullible colleagues. Even Jason De Leon was once trustworthy before getting involved with these guys. Just sad.
Anonymous said…
Re passing the harasser, wasn’t sure if to bring it up before but now I am. Reliable sources at Loyola Marymount University recall that sometimes around 2001 or 2002 (so long before the Cotsen and IFR,) Ran Boytner tried to build there another archaeology program but it was rejected. My understanding was that this was due to Dr. Boytner being hostile to a male senior faculty member and that pretty much cost him his job there as a lecturer. If it wasn’t for the abusive way he treated people I personally know, I would have felt a bit sorry for the guy for trying and failing so many times.\
Anonymous said…
We’ve seen it all before. Boytner understands perfectly that with his past he’s pretty much finished in institutional academia or anywhere else that requires background check. This is the only reason why hes so invested in all those do-it-yourself cottage non profits. It has nothing to do with saving the planet and everything to do with saving his ass.
Anonymous said…
Additional information about Ran Boytner’s “Center for Field Sciences” can be found here
https://businesssearch.sos.ca.gov/Document/RetrievePDF?Id=04671879-30527141
[Document signed 12/1/20; filed May 10, 2021]

Chief Executive Officer: Giulia Saltini Semerari
Secretary: Ruth Tringham
Chief Financial Officer: Donn Grenda
California Agent: Giulia Saltini Semerari
Signed by Giulia Saltini Semerari, “Secretery” [sic]

Giulia Saltini Semerari is a Research Affiliate at the Museum of Anthropological Archaeology University of Michigan, and a field director at IFR field school in Italy
https://lsa.umich.edu/ummaa/people/research-affiliates/tulillas.html
https://ifrglobal.org/program/italyincoronata/

Ruth Tringham is a Professor Emerita of Anthropology at UC Berkeley
https://anthropology.berkeley.edu/ruth-e-tringham

Donn Grenda is President of Statistical Research, Inc.
http://www.sricrm.com/about/bio_grenda.html
Michael Balter said…
Re the above:

I'm really surprised to see that my old friend Ruth Tringham, also a major figure in my book about the excavations at Catalhoyuk ("The Goddess and the Bull") is associated with Boytner and his new organization. Perhaps someone who also knows her could check and see if she is aware of Boytner's history...
Anonymous said…
I don’t know her, but you’d be amazed how many archaeologists fail to learn from the past.

Also too bad for the IFR that they don’t read these rinky-dink comments, or else they would have realized that they are currently employing their up-and-coming competitor.
Anonymous said…
In their earlier communications the IFR pledged to protect students and communities by following CDC recommendations. It has now been brought to my attention that despite these earlier assurances they are presently running fieldschools in destinations that both the CDC and the US DEPARTMENT OF STATE strictly advised against travel due to ongoing COVID-19 threat.
At UCLA researchers are still required to comply with CDC mandates and go through EHS review and approval prior to any field research, so Wendrich et al continue to use the IFR umbrella in order to operate under the institutional radar.
Anonymous said…

It makes total sense because at this point they MUST be desperate for some cash flow.
Take a click at those links
https://data.vcstar.com/paycheck-protection-program-loans/?state=California&searchtext=Institute+for+Field+Research

https://www.federalpay.org/paycheck-protection-program/institute-for-field-research-los-angeles-ca
ALERT: There are 2 PPP loans for a total of $144,102 in our database for businesses with the name "Institute For Field Research" in Los Angeles, CA.

So together with the personal loans discussed above, this should bring it close to $200,000 –
300,000 in loan debt.
Michael Balter said…
Although some seem to think that I write all of the anonymous comments on this blog, I actually don’t know who is doing this research to keep tabs on IFR and Ran Boytner. But I appreciate it, as do many others I am sure. My own investigative energies need to stay focused on the Kurin v. Balter litigation. Watch for new developments on that front coming soon.
Anonymous said…

Your initial reporting undeniably woke people up, and since then there are a few out there who are keeping a close eye on fieldwork organizations that self-regulate like IFR and whatever Ron Boytner will concoct next. And we’ll persist so long as inadequate oversight and lack of accountability and transparency is putting our students at risk.
And in that spirit, RE the links provided above, what puzzles me is the first PPP loan:

Loan Size:
$81,000
Jobs Retained:
5
Loan Approved:
2020-04-06
Loan Status:
Ongoing Loan

And if you scroll to the bottom of the page:

On the PPP application, Institute For Field Research reported intending to use the proceeds of their PPP loan for the following expenses:
Payroll: $60,100
Utilities: $1,500
Rent: $11,800
Health Care: $5,500
Debt Interest: $2,100

Whereas we now know that ED Boytner was fired in April for breach of trust, and according to the letter the field school directors received from the BOD on April 24 2020, all other employees were laid off on April 10 so almost immediately after the loan approval date. Plus, they got rid of the L.A. office soon after that. All this was confirmed by Wendrich herself in the June town—hall meeting, and June 4 2020 update https://web.archive.org/web/20200606094213/https://ifrglobal.org/
“In April 2020, in response to the global COVID-19 pandemic, IFR canceled our Summer 2020 field school season and laid off our staff. Since then, IFR’s Board of Governors has been managing the organization, monitoring the pandemic, and working hard to deliver value to our students and field school directors.”

So if you follow the digital paper trail, it looks like, 1) They got the PPP loan on April 6 2020, 2) AND THEN disposed of all employees and the office so there was actually no Payroll, Utilities, Rent, or Health Care to pay for as was intended. I believe it was only much later that they started hiring new employees, but if you look closely at their staff history for 2020 there wasn’t any real “retention” to speak of and certainly not “5 jobs” as was claimed on the PPP loan:
https://web.archive.org/web/20200701000000*/www.ifrglobal.org

So my question is, what were those $81,000 of the first loan really used for? To pay for the other debt to their board member? This could have very serious implications if this PPP loan is to be qualified for forgiveness.
Anonymous said…
Re the PPP loan...there are very strict requirements for loan forgiveness. Significant proof must be submitted to the lending bank and SBA regarding use of funds and most of the funds must be used for wages or other permitted uses. Failure to do so results in the need to repay the loan. No idea whether IFR is in compliance, but if all employees were laid off it would seem to be impossible that they complied with the forgiveness requirement
Anonymous said…
And while you’re at it I suggest looking into this statement which also raises a red flag:
“Based on the standard PPP eligibility formula, it may be possible to estimate the payroll expenses represented by a company on their PPP application (see details above). In order to qualify for the PPP loan amount received, Institute For Field Research's 2019 payroll expenses are estimated to be at least $388,800.
Based on their reported 5 jobs retained, this equals an estimated average yearly compensation of $77,760 per employee”
It would be useful to compare this to their 2019 tax return. Anyone?
Anonymous said…
Take a looksie here & particularly the last part
https://www.mondaq.com/unitedstates/government-contracts-procurement-ppp/1077704/ppp-fraud-update-on-the-doj39s-activity
“The PPP provides forgivable loans to assist small businesses with expenses during the COVID-19 shutdown. Like many other federal programs, the PPP requires a series of certifications to receive federal funding. False certifications can expose small businesses to civil liability under the False Claims Act ("FCA") and the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act ("FIRREA"), as well as criminal liability under (among others) the federal mail and wire fraud statutes…
the DOJ's intention to use the FCA to combat any alleged "false representations regarding eligibility, misuse of program funds, and false certifications pertaining to loan forgiveness...
Finally, of the eight federal criminal cases related to COVID-relief fraud charged in February 2021, six proceedings centered on alleged fraudulent statements in loan applications about payroll expenses for employees.
Specifically, the indictments allege that the applications contained false and misleading statements about the number of employees or average monthly payroll expenses for the business's operations. Certain defendants allegedly also submitted false documentation in support of their false statements, like falsified federal tax filings5 or false W-2s6 for purported employees who were not in fact employed by the company.”

As I see it, in the case of IFR it may turn into a liability case only if and when they try to file for forgiveness based on the Reported PPP Proceed Usage. The provided “paper trail” shows convincingly that a few days after their loan was approved in April, they dismissed all employees. This last bit seems undeniable as it was publically declared by the organization on several occasions. They may still try to argue that they later replaced those employees with others, but then the question remains why they haven’t retained the pre-loan staff and how much time elapsed during the turnover (if months, then something is clearly off.) I don’t understand when exactly they surrendered their office, but the 2nd $63,102 PPP loan from 2021-03-24 declares a different mailing address and a Reported PPP Proceed Usage of $1 in utilities. Someone needs to verify that, but to me this implies that the first loan was NOT used to pay for rent and utilities as intended.
Anonymous said…
Right now they have 5 employees
https://ifrglobal.org/about/staff/
Interesting that they still haven’t found or annouinced the replacement for Boytner
Anonymous said…

From what I hear it was BOYTNER who filed for the first PPP loan, which makes sense considering the time these take to process.
Quite the poetic justice that he’d be kicked out to the curb as soon as the loan was approved.
No wonder he is back in vengeance with a rival company.
Anonymous said…
I still subscribe to the theory that these IFR spin off projects by Boytner, Kurin etc. are still in principal connected to IFR. These people have demonstrated that they will stick together no matter what.
Anonymous said…
I’m not so sure, but here’s something to thicken the plot. Turns out the IFR address on the PPP loan form: 1855 Industrial St. Unit 106
Also pops up for the ARTS DISTRICT COMMUNITY COUNCIL LA
https://www.adccla.org/#our-board
The Founding Board Member is Yuval Bar-Zemer, the same guy who is on the IFR board and gave them the 100k+ personal loan.
Up until 12/2020 or later, Boytner was also on the same board.
https://web.archive.org/web/20201130172227if_/https://www.adccla.org/#who-we-are

Dr. Ran Boytner
Founding Board Member
Ran Boytner received his PhD in archaeology from UCLA in 2008. Working at the Getty, UCLA and USC, he is presently the Director of the Institute for Field Research (IFR). Dr. Boytner’s research interests includes South America, the evolution of nascent states and the relationships between archaeology and politics. He is a founding board member of Ocean Charter School and the Nonprofit Support Group — an organization of nonprofit Executive Directors that pool resources together to increase efficiency in individual organization’s mission and vision.
Dr. Boytner has owned property in the Arts District and since 2010, the IFR is headquartered at the Toy Factory Lofts.

& I see he is still in the photo at the bottom of the page (to the left)
https://www.adccla.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-10535579_793548934022555_2736568265258375124_o.jpg

What the heck is going on?
Anonymous said…
He was just kicked out of another nonprofit organization, that what’s going on. Also no sign of him on the boards of the Ocean Charter School and the Nonprofit Support Group.
Anonymous said…

Tweet
Michael Balter, happily independent journalist
@mbalter
Commenters on this blog post continue to raise questions about whether
@IFRArchaeology is properly protecting students participating in its field schools from Covid-19. #Archaeology https://michael-balter.blogspot.com/2020/06/a-ucla-town-hall-on-meto-and-related.html
11:02 AM · Jun 10, 2021·Twitter Web App


Looks like the Nicaragua summer school started this week
https://ifrglobal.org/program/nicaragua-granada/
Right now Nicaragua is a pandemic-ridden dictatorship. Not only it is Level 4 on CDC (“Avoid travel”) and State Dep (“Do Not Travel”), now presidente Ortega is violating human rights and jailing political opponents in preparation for the November elections. These students are in a dangerous situation. Don’t believe companies that compromise your safety for your tuition dollars. Educate yourself.

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/another-ortega-critic-arrested-inciting-foreign-interference-nicaragua-2021-06-13/

https://www.npr.org/2021/06/12/1005833559/nicaragua-sees-democracy-crisis-as-president-ortega-jails-potential-election-riv

https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/Nicaragua.html

https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-nicaragua

https://www.npr.org/2021/05/12/996122094/citizens-work-to-expose-covids-real-toll-in-nicaragua-as-leaders-claim-success

https://observatorioni.org/

Anonymous said…

“@IFRArchaeology
Jun 15
The Boncuklu field school is a famous Medieval centre founded by the Medieval philosopher, Celaleddin Rumi. The deep immersion in the site is complimented by an incredible range of regional field trips to other sites and museums including Çatalhöyük, pictured here!”

No, IFR, I’m pretty sure that Rumi did not found your field school. Also, the word you were looking for is “complemented.”
Please stop spreading misinformation and get someone with basic education write your Tweets.
Anonymous said…
Addendum to whomever tweets there (because we all know you’re reading): If you want to learn more about Çatalhöyük and hopefully spare yourself from future embarrassments, I highly recommend the book “The Goddess and the Bull: Çatalhöyük: An Archaeological Journey to the Dawn of Civilization” by Michael Balter.
Anonymous said…

@IFRArchaeology
·
Jun 21
“A small window into the lives of IFR students who are taking a leap into a unique learning environment…Wishing safe journeys to our students arriving in Zagreb for our Croatia: Lobor program today!”


https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/Croatia.html
“Croatia - Level 4: Do Not Travel”
“Do not travel to Croatia due to COVID-19.”
“The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has issued a Level 4 Travel Health Notice for the Croatia due to COVID-19, indicating a very high level of COVID-19 in the country.”


https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/notices/covid-4/coronavirus-croatia
“Level 4: Very High Level of COVID-19 in Croatia”
“Avoid travel to Croatia.”
“Because of the current situation in Croatia, even fully vaccinated travelers may be at risk for getting and spreading COVID-19 variants.”
Anonymous said…
Sure, and yesterday they announced another field program in the UK where cases are soaring dramatically as a result of the raging Delta variant. As someone else correctly observed -- all the other international field schools that they launched are in countries that were declared as LEVEL 4: DO NOT TRAVEL when these started, while the CDC and the State Department continue to stress that even fully vaccinated people (young travellers in particular) are at risk of getting and spreading COVID. As a reminder, IFR is an NPO so unlike UCEAP and other universities they are not bound by institutional health and safety best practices or follow CDC and DOS travel advisories. You know, like they are not bound by Title IX and all that “protocol” nonsense.