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New York: A day after Janata Party chief Subramanian Swamy said Harvard University should have approached him first before deciding on removing his courses, the American institution said it was a norm for the faculty to annually "amend" and vote upon the course list for its summer school sessions.
Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences had voted earlier this week to remove two economics courses that Swamy taught at the university's annual Summer School programme citing a controversial op-ed on Islamic terrorism in India that he had written for an Indian publication.
Faculty members felt Swamy's views in the piece were "reprehensible" and amounted to "incitement of violence".
The courses were dropped from next year's session after the faculty voted with an "overwhelming majority".
Reacting to the news, Swamy said in New Delhi that he had assumed Harvard would have sent its petition to him asking for his comments before taking any decision.
In response to Swamy's comments, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences said in an emailed statement that "members of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences each year vote to approve or amend the course list for Harvard Summer School".
It added that the Faculty had voted to approve the curriculum for the Summer School for the coming summer session with the exception of the two courses, "about which there was considerable discussion".
The Harvard Summer School is an annual programme that runs typically from June through August.
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