REVIEWS of NO UNIVERSITY IS AN ISLAND
UNIVERSITY MATTERS
By Bob Samuels
Review:
On Cary Nelson’s No University is an Island (NYU Press)
January 24, 2010
Cary Nelson’s new book, NO UNIVERSITY IS AN ISLAND, brings together many
of the different issues that are currently facing the University of
California and other higher education institutions. While his theme is
academic freedom, he is able to locate this central educational value at the
intersection of several interlocking forces: privatization, casualization,
corporatization, and globalization. Nelson, the current president of AAUP,
asks the essential question of what happens to the ability of faculty to
teach, research, and communicate when profit has replaced the public good,
and when public institutions are being privatized while job security is
being casualized. By invoking the general concept of neoliberalism, Nelson
is able to show how even the most secure and privileged faculty are
threatened by the growing power of business-oriented administrators who have
wrestled most aspects of shared governance away from professors. From his
perspective, without tenure, there can be no academic freedom, and without
academic freedom, there can be no shared governance.
I was surprised to note that virtually all of the examples of
corporatization and privatization that Nelson documents from around the
world have recently occurred in the UC system. This includes administrators
pushing expensive, untested online programs, faculty having their emails
read, Right-wing groups trying to censor teachers, the creation of Ad Hoc
committees to circumvent normal shared governance, the push to defund the
Humanities, the creation of false budget emergencies to push through hidden
agendas, and the persecution of university whistleblowers to name just a
few. Not only have I discussed all of these issues in my blog, but my
program has been victimized by all of these destructive processes.
Not only did I discover this year that administrators were reading all
of my program’s emails, but our campus, UCLA, recently had to fight an
outside Right-wing group that was paying students to record teachers saying
anti-conservative things. If this was not bad enough, UCLA recently decided
to set up their own internal web site so that students and other community
members could report acts of bias. This type of digital survellience system
surely has a chilling effect on academic freedom.
Of course, one of the greatest threats to academic freedom that Nelson
discusses is the growing use of contingent faculty who often have no
academic freedom protections. While the union contract regulating the
lecturers in the UC system gives the non-tenured faculty the same academic
freedom rights as the tenured faculty, lecturers often have to self-censor
themselves because many of them rely on getting high student evaluations to
keep their jobs, and most of these contingent faculty members can be let go
without just cause. We have found that even the lecturers with job security
and due process can be eliminated if the university declares a fiscal
emergency.
The greatest strength of Nelson’s book is that it constantly returns to
the idea that only the faculty working collectively can defend the
university as a public good. By chiding some of his colleagues for focusing
too much on their own careers, he makes a strong plea for all of us to take
back our institutions. Furthermore, by documenting cases of effective
faculty resistance, Nelson provides a glimmer of hope in these dark times.
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Bob Samuels is president of the University Council--American Federation of Teachers, which represents lecturers in the University of California system.
He teaches at UCLA and writes a blog titled CHANGING UNIVERSITY, where this review was published.
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