Bill Ackman's wife, Neri Oxman, was accused of plagiarizing a few days after Claudine Gay resigned




In the midst of the aftermath at Harvard College over Claudine Gay's new renunciation, Neri Oxman — companion of Bill Ackman, who blamed Claudine Gay for counterfeiting — has additionally been blamed for counterfeiting in her paper. Business Insider made the allegations public this afternoon.


Since 2017, Oxman has held a tenured position at MIT, where she also completed her PhD dissertation in 2010. As per Business Insider, a few passages in Oxman's exposition have all the earmarks of being counterfeited as they utilize direct statements from sources without quotes.


Journalists guarantee that in Oxman's 2010 exposition, she copied text from 1998 by two Israeli researchers — Steve Winer and H. Daniel Wagner. Oxman's exposition additionally supposedly lifted text from two separate articles by NYU history specialist Peder Anker distributed in 1995 and 2006. She is likewise blamed for counterfeiting text from a 1998 book by German physicist Claus Mattheck.


In the last option occasion, Oxman duplicated one section from Mattheck with no citation or attribution, Business Insider detailed. According to the MIT Handbook's criteria, such instances are allegedly plagiarism. Thusly, Neri Oxman answered the claims via online entertainment.


.The charges are unexpected, given the hardline position against counterfeiting Oxman's significant other, Bill Ackman, a mutual funds chief, has required lately against comparative scholastic stumbles concerning previous Harvard College president Claudine Gay.


Following Claudine Gay's legislative hearing on December 5, 2023 about enemy of Semitism at Harvard, moderate media savants collaborated with Ackman, a significant Harvard giver, in calling for Gay to leave.


The calls were intensified while traditional columnists like Chris Brunet, Aaron Sibarium, and Christopher Rufo uncovered claims that Claudine Gay counterfeited pieces of her PhD paper from 2010. Rufo and The Free Reference point's Aaron Sibarium utilized the claims to work up animosity toward Harvard's most memorable Dark president.


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