Ideology drives attacks on ANU
There is no justification for
university officers collaborating in the Government's agenda on
academic independence, writes Geoff Davies.
The Canberra
Times, 19 October 1999
There
is a more insidious aspect of the leaked Cabinet submission by
Education Minister, Dr. Kemp, than the well-remarked desire
of the Howard Government to throw universities to the market wolves.
The Government and its henchmen are also poised to
clinch a
long-standing campaign to destroy the remaining independence of
individual
academics.
Without
such independence,
universities cease to be universities, and become mere training and
consulting
enterprises, puppets of commerce and of political and social fads,
guardians
of mediocrity. Unfortunately
the imminent threat to academic independence at the Australian National
University
comes from within, via another attack on job security.
The
"labor market flexibility"
agenda, which predates the Howard Government, would end job security in
universities.
This misguided ideology attributes zero value to
employee knowledge
and experience, to collective knowledge, and to the commitment, morale
and
health of employees. Few employees
in Australia are not feeling its baleful effects, but in a university
this
ideology strikes at the central purpose of the institution.
The
decade-long campaign
to end the autonomy of universities and the independence of academics
has
been so protracted that it has brought into play the boiling frog
syndrome.
As the water heats slowly around it, the frog adapts and
adapts
until it is too late, the frog overheats and can't jump out.
If we donÕt soon name the problem within ANU, it
will
be too late to do anything about it.
ANU's
problem is that
it is being destroyed by its own senior management and its own
governing
Council. Whether the people
involved are zealots, appeasers, or merely misguided is irrelevant.
What they are doing will assure the demise of one of the
worldÕs
great universities.
The
short, splendid history
of ANU, only fifty-two years long, is a tribute to the vision, energy
and
stature of its founders. Within
that short time it became an excellent university by any overall
measure,
and the Research Schools of its Institute of Advanced Studies quickly
reached
the world cutting edge in fundamental research.
It has also generated lucrative spinoffs.
Repeatedly and consistently, the Institute has been
ranked
within the handful of best institutions in the world.
Despite
this clear and
outstanding record, ANU staff have over a long period been portrayed by
politicians
and senior management as second-rate, lazy, wasteful, inflexible,
unimaginative
and useless. These are the implications
behind the endless stream of managerial euphemisms about efficiency,
accountability, quality assurance, innovation, flexibility,
streamlining and so on.
The implications never had a significant basis in fact.
The euphemisms essentially are lies.
However
under the cover
of this barrage of misinformation management has been progressively
centralised.
While the university must accommodate to Government
funding squeezes, there is no justification for university officers
collaborating
in the GovernmentÕs attack on academic independence, as they
have
consistently done and continue to do.
This is
most evident in management's erratic approach
to enterprise bargaining this year. Their
first, derisory "offer" was for a further serious reduction
of employment conditions and a sub-inflationary pay rise.
Later they offered to roll over existing employment
conditions.
Then they announced an immediate and unconditional 3%
pay rise.
Modest longer-term raises were offered and some
desultory discussion
of other issues occurred.
Now
management have suddenly
reverted to demanding major reductions in job security and other
protections.
Such erratic switches betray bad faith.
The implication of these demands is to complete the
replacement
of academic merit-based processes and considerations with managerial
command
processes based on pursuing commercial money and political ideology.
The collateral damage would be the essential elimination
of
academic independence.
What
would be left would
be Australian National Training and Consulting, Inc.
The facade of a university would persist for some time.
Many excellent staff would continue their work but,
inexorably,
the ANU would fail to attract the best, and those it hired would be
forced
to accommodate the dictates of an ignorant management clique.
The process has been under way for several years already.
The
attitude of ANU management
may be contrasted with that of Sydney Vice-Chancellor Gavin Brown, who
has
written that he agreed to a substantial salary increase there because
"the
main resource of a university is the intellectual calibre of its staff".
Meanwhile,
a major pre-occupation of ANU's Deputy Vice Chancellor, Professor John
Richards, has been to sort out continuing disarray in The Faculties. Rather than quietly becoming familiar with
everyone and everything, exploring options
and perhaps even building some trust, the DVC and the Vice-Chancellor
sought
and received from Council a mandate for Richards to conduct a one-man
review.
The
administrative review
must be one of the least useful forms of human communication.
A review provokes defensive posturing.
It generates mountains of paper.
Views are Òtaken on boardÓ.
Discussion, feedback and clarification are minimised.
Misconceptions, misunderstandings and ignorance
propagate happily.
Predictably,
Richards'
report, recently presented to Council, has elicited howls of protest
from
up and down the academic ranks that its proposed actions are
inappropriate
and draconian. Nevertheless,
Council has seen fit to endorse most of its proposals without the
benefit
of comment from the academic boards.
Most
of Council's members
attend the campus but once a month and are heavily reliant on the
information
and perceptions fed to them by senior management.
Since the ANU Council was halved in size some years ago
to
22 members, there are only two academic representatives unencumbered by
management
roles. On the other hand, Council
is heavily weighted with management officers (6) and with political
appointees
(8). These include influential
ideologues whose approach to "human resource management" is to call in
Peter
Reith's dogs.
The ANU
did not become great by offering uncompetitive salaries and then
treating its staff as if they were lazy and stupid.
It became great by hiring the best people in the world,
giving
them a loose rein and saying "go for your life".
Accounting was a means, not an end.
Excellent academic staff were regarded as the
university's
primary asset, rather than its greatest problem.
The
ANU has been colonised
by an alien world view that is hostile to the essence of a university.
By denigrating excellent staff and trampling on their
independence
and morale, this malign presence guarantees the demise of ANU as a
world-class university and a bastion of liberal democracy.
It
is time for ANU staff
to look beyond the present engagements, and to confront the larger task
of
ridding the university of this subversive influence.
This will require not only repopulating management with
people
who will protect and promote the university's essential values, but
also
a public and political campaign to reconstitute the ANU Council.