In January 2017, the original (now former) policy on not taking political stands was in force. The AOM was constrained from condemning the U.S. President's Executive Order by the AOM policy against taking a political stand on any matter. Because the U.S. President's Executive Order was political, the AOM could not condemn it for any reason, i.e., on moral, academic, pragmatic, or other grounds.
Articles in this section
- What is the AOM's Policy on Taking Stands?
- Was this always the AOM's Policy on Taking Stands?
- How is the current Policy on Taking Stands similar or different from the former policy?
- Has the AOM taken any stands since enacting the current Policy on Taking Stands?
- What is the process for the AOM to consider taking a stand?
- Can Divisions, Interest Groups, Committee Chairs, and/or Journal Editors take stands in the name of the AOM?
- What is the origin of the original (now former) policy on not taking political stands?
- What prompted the change to the original (now former) policy on not taking political stands?
- Why didn't AOM publicly condemn the Executive Order of January 27, 2017 when it was first issued?
- AOM commissioned a Task Force to assist with operationalizing the current Policy on Taking Stands. What did the Task Force on Taking Stands conclude?
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