Holding Job Search Committees More Accountable
In a recent blog post, I noted that only a quarter of the jobs listed in Perspectives, and only one out of every seven history jobs listed on H-Net, made use of the AHA's Job Register facilities for interviews. Bowen is correct in stating that"most tenure-track positions are advertised in the AHA Perspectives," but he likely errs when he implies that most of the interviews for these job searches take place at the AHA. Similarly, Bowen is technically correct when he states that the AHA"has a great deal of control over . . . the interview process," but he overlooks the fact that interviews for only a relatively small proportion of academic history jobs occur with the assistance of the AHA's Job Register staff.
So here is what I would propose. The AHA has records of all the individuals who registered for the 2008 convention. It also knows which departments reserved a room in the Job Register for interviews. With a little bit of digging, it could extract the names of job search committee chairs from recent job ads in Perspectives and H-Net. The AHA could then compare and contrast these three lists. It could produce a report that tells us how many job search committee chairs registered for the convention. The report could point out how much this number exceeds the 260 job searches that made use of Job Register facilities earlier this month. (Not all of the interviews for these 260 job searches were held in the official Job Register Rooms; job search committees that held interviews elsewhere were required to notify the Job Register staff of their location and, in return, they received c.v.'s collected by the Job Register staff.) This would then give us an idea of how many departments are circumventing the AHA's policies and procedures by not disclosing the location of their interviews to the Job Register staff. The AHA should then consider revealing the names of these departments, since job seekers deserve to receive warnings about the unethical practices of these departments. If the AHA does not want to make this list widely available, it could adopt Bowen's suggestion for a listserv and send notifications to only the individuals who had applied for specific jobs advertised by noncompliant departments.