Stanford Defends Decision To Host Richard Hanania, Proficient Author Of Racist Screeds

Richard Hanania is the president of the Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology. Until recently he was listed as a visiting scholar at the Salem Center for Policy at the University of Texas-Austin McCombs School of Business. Stanford GSB will host him in October. Photo illustration by Justin Morrison/Inside Higher Ed. Photo: Salem Center for Policy

Even after a right-wing policy center at the University of Texas-Austin McCombs School of Business cut ties with him, the conservative firebrand at the center of a controversy involving his history of white supremacist writings has landed on his feet. That’s in part because another prominent B-school continues to promote the scandal-ridden writer’s appearance on its campus next month.

Richard Hanania, who became a visiting scholar at Texas McCombs’ Salem Center for Policy in March 2022, was revealed in an August Huffington Post exposé to have written for white-supremacist publications in the 2010s. Using the pen name “Richard Hoste,” Hanania wrote in favor of eugenics, among other racist screeds. Though he has since apologized and repudiated his writings and the racist beliefs informing them, Hanania has apparently been cut loose by the center: His bio page has been disabled from its website, and his name has been scrubbed from its list of fellows and scholars.

But Hanania hasn’t been completely cancelled by the world of graduate business education. He’s still listed as a speaker for Stanford University Graduate School of Business’s Classical Liberalism seminar series, scheduled to appear October 5 to discuss The Origins of Woke: Civil Rights Law, Corporate America, and the Triumph of Identity Politics, which is the title of his book published September 19. And Stanford is defending the move to platform him.

A screenshot of the October 5 seminar that Richard Hanania is scheduled to give at Stanford GSB

STANFORD RESPONDS TO STORY BY P&Q AND OTHER MEDIA

Following the Huffington Post exposé on Hanania and the publication of Poets&Quants‘ story, Stanford added this statement to the notice of Hanania’s appearance:

“Richard Hanania is scheduled to give a talk at Stanford Classical Liberalism seminar about his recent book The Origins of Woke. Recently, it has been revealed that more than fifteen years ago Hanania wrote, under a pseudonym, some abhorrent ideas. We were not aware of these writings when we invited Hanania. More importantly, Hanania has repudiated his old writings. We take his word and recognize the possibility that he has changed over the past fifteen years. We believe in a world where people can listen, change their views, and contribute productively. We are thus planning to go ahead with Richard Hanania’s talk.”