AUS Tertiary Update
AUS members vote to merge unions
Members of the
Association of University Staff have voted by a significant
margin to proceed towards amalgamation with the two other
main tertiary-education-sector unions, the Association of
Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) and the Tertiary
Institutions’ Allied Staff Association (TIASA). In a
ballot which closed on Monday this week, 73 percent of those
AUS members who participated in the ballot voted in favour
of amalgamation.
The result has comfortably surpassed the
65 percent vote threshold set by the AUS Council to guide
AUS Conference delegates on this issue. Amalgamation would
create a new 13,000-member-strong New Zealand Tertiary
Education Union
AUS National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, said that the turnout of Association members (64
percent) was probably the highest participation rate in any
ballot in the union’s history.
Professor Haworth
described the ballot result as striking, following three
years of wide and mature discussion within AUS. “It offers
a resounding endorsement of the amalgamation proposal, and
delegates to the AUS Annual Conference in November, with
whom the final decision rests, will be in no doubt about
members’ support for amalgamation,” he said.
“Moreover, the proposed structure of the new union
comprehensively meets member needs and permits and
encourages all parts of the union to have a voice. It will
underpin a united union, able to play a leading role in the
direction of New Zealand’s tertiary-education
sector.”
Should the other two unions vote in support of
amalgamation, a number of processes will begin later this
year, with new rules to be drawn up and final consultation
to be held around proposed new structures and staffing
arrangements. The new union would become operational at the
beginning of 2009.
The results of the ballots of ASTE and
TIASA members will be known by Monday next week.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Auckland – cracking or
crumbling?
2. Rift deepens at Massey
3. Concern over
IP piracy
4. Vice-Chancellor’s statement misguided, say
students
5. Funding boost for strategic
research
6. Colombia University President takes on
Ahmadinejad
7. Dismissal hearing suppressed
8. AAUP
urges university presidents to stand firm
9. UCL is sued
over £500 million deal
10. When professors just can’t
get along
Auckland – cracking or crumbling?
In what
is probably the most damning indictment ever published in
this country of relationships within any New Zealand
university, the Weekend Herald has described serious levels
of dysfunction at the University of Auckland’s “oddly
named” National Institute of Creative Arts Industries
(NICAI). Under the heading, “Cracks appearing in the
foundation”, a Weekend Herald feature uses the recent
sudden departure of Professor Peggy Deamer to investigate
wider relationship problems within NICAI. The feature
concludes that there are not just two different sides to the
problems, the parties are on two different planets.
In
recent weeks, employment disputes at the University have
received international attention, with the UK Guardian
describing Auckland as having a prickly year with the
high-profile departures of Deamer, Eric Hollis from the
University’s School of Music and Paul Buchanan from the
Department of Political Science.
The Herald says that
staff and students spoken to about the problems within NICAI
variously describe a climate of fear, a climate of cynicism,
a climate of asphyxiation and a toxic environment. A number
of students have written to the Herald asking not to be
named for fear of reprisal. They talk about feeling
intimidated and marginalised and receiving heavy-handed
emails. The feature reports staff as saying they would only
talk on condition they were not named, describing a highly
controlling management regime, a culture of blame, being
drowned in paperwork, endlessly having to re-do proposals
and being reprimanded for petty issues. Staff say they got
the feeling that no matter what they did it would not be
good enough.
On the Herald’s other planet,
Vice-Chancellor Stuart McCutcheon and NICAI Dean Sharman
Pretty are reported to have presented a relaxed air of
confidence. They say of Deamer’s resignation that, in the
context of large organisations, such things do happen, are a
statistical reality. They say of an AUS survey within NICAI
which showed low morale, high stress and lowering levels of
collegiality, that its size and some of the methodology made
it unscientific. “There is not”, says McCutcheon, “a
single piece of evidence of somebody being disadvantaged
because they’ve spoken out about what the University
does.”
The full Herald story can be read
at:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/author/story.cfm?a_id=36&objectid=10465642
Rift
deepens at Massey
More signs of the rift between Massey
University’s senior management and governing Council
emerged last week with reports that the Council has
overturned a senior management decision to close the
University’s Engineering courses at its Wellington
campus.
Education Review reports that it has been given
documents alleging a “war” between some Council members
and the Vice-Chancellor after senior managers decided to
drop Engineering courses in Wellington because of
competition from Victoria University’s new Engineering
programme and a lack of applicants for the courses with the
necessary pre-requisites.
One of the documents cited by
Education Review is a letter to senior managers from the
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Judith Kinnear, saying that the
Chancellor and Pro-Chancellor had determined that
Engineering in Wellington would not be withdrawn and that it
is possible that the programme could be supported for
another five years. “The consequence of the Council’s
action is that elements of the Financial Recovery Plan
already presented to Council are now called into question,
as are the priorities for investment in the next three
years, and that the role of senior academic managers is
facing re-definition,” Professor Kinnear
wrote.
Professor Kinnear says that the question of which
courses are offered on a particular campus are a management
matter and the cessation of intake into a particular course
the Vice-Chancellor’s decision.
In May this year, the
Chancellor, Nigel Gould, publicly announced the retirement
of the Vice-Chancellor in a move that was variously reported
to have distressed, saddened and dismayed Professor Kinnear.
At the time, Professor Kinnear said she had only informally
discussed the possibility of her retirement, and had asked
the Chancellor not to make any statement.
At the time, Mr
Gould told the Manawatu Standard that the appointment of a
vice-chancellor was for a fixed term, much like a senior
civil servant.
Mr Gould has dismissed as rubbish
suggestions that the current decisions around Engineering in
Wellington are an example of a bad relationship between the
Council and management.
Fairfax Media reports that
neither Professor Kinnear nor her senior communications
staff were prepared to comment.
Concern over IP
piracy
Significant concern has been expressed at
Canterbury over an announcement that a venture-capital
investor, Endeavour Capital, has secured first rights to
invest in intellectual property coming from the University
of Canterbury. Endeavour has formed the partnership with the
University’s commercialisation arm, Canterprise, and is
setting up a $10 million investment fund.
The investment
announcement preceded the release of a draft policy on
intellectual property rights at the University which says
that all ideas, concepts, improvements on existing products
and all other developments that would normally be patented
are now automatically University property.
According to
the Association of University Staff Canterbury Branch
Chairperson, Associate Professor Jack Heinemann, the draft
policy allows the University to force the commercialisation
of IP, or on-sell IP rights, even where the creator objected
on moral or other grounds. Further, the University could
prevent creators from pursuing their own ideas privately or
with another employer even after leaving employment with the
University. “Even Blackbeard would be taken aback by this
audacious plundering of individual property by the corporate
identity of the University,” said Associate Professor
Heinemann.
He added that, if any financial proceeds arise
from IP that was created wholly or in part with support from
public funding, then the staff or student creator(s) should
be bound to share the rewards of commercialisation with the
University, and should be so bound indefinitely. But this
should not entail forfeiture of ownership
rights.
Existing policy allows the University to
commercialise IP with the consent of the creator(s), and to
purchase the IP rights from the creator(s). “For staff to
feel that they may have to put the profit motivations of the
University before their obligations to what they might
believe is the public good is unacceptable,” he
said.
Associate Professor Heinemann further added that
existing policy is sufficient to secure a revenue stream
from all IP developed using University resources without the
need for the University to strip the creator of ownership.
Vice-Chancellor’s statement misguided, say
students
The Otago University Students’ Association
(OUSA) has taken issue with a statement sent to students by
the Vice-Chancellor, Professor David Skegg, defending the
University’s Code of Conduct following reported comments
by constitutional lawyer Mai Chen that the Code is illegal.
Ms Chen said that students have the same human rights as
everyone else: the right to freedom of movement, freedom of
association and freedom of expression, and that the Code may
be enforceable only if an incident occurred on campus or
during an official University interchange.
The University
introduced the Code of Conduct last year in an attempt to
control the unruly behaviour displayed by some students
outside of the immediate University environment.
In his
statement to students, Professor Skegg denied that the Code
was legally flawed and added that OUSA opposition to the
Code came only at the “eleventh hour”.
OUSA
President, Renée Heal, says she is frustrated that the
letter was sent to students without consultation with OUSA,
adding that OUSA has always opposed the University’s claim
to be entitled to discipline students for conduct that
occurs off campus and not in relation to University
events.
“OUSA’s objection has consistently been based
on its legal advice that that form of disciplinary action is
outside the University’s powers under the Education
Act,” Ms Heal said. “If it is outside the
University’s legal powers under the Education Act, then
the Code cannot be used to discipline students.”
Ms
Heal said that OUSA’s legal advice is that a challenge to
the Code could well result in parts of the Code being
declared invalid, or the University’s intended application
of the Code being declared unlawful.
In the aftermath of
Dunedin’s post-“Undie-500” riot, Professor Skegg told
Tertiary Update that the University would be liaising with
the police and taking whatever action was appropriate under
the new disciplinary guidelines contained in the Code.
It
is not known whether any students involved in the riots have
been cited under the Code.
Funding boost for strategic
research
Nearly $8 million will be invested over the next
two years to boost research capacity in the high-priority
areas of Nursing, Veterinary Science, and Information and
Communications Technology (ICT). The funding is being
allocated through the latest round of the Building Research
Capability in Strategically Relevant Areas Fund.
In
making the announcement, the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Dr Michael Cullen, said that Nursing, Veterinary
Science and ICT are all issues of major strategic importance
for New Zealand, but they haven’t always attracted enough
investment to build a strong research culture.
Dr Cullen
said that the University of Auckland and the University of
Waikato will jointly receive $3.2 million to build an ICT
research community within New Zealand, with a focus on
excellence shown by young and emerging researchers.
“Computer science has a relatively short history of
research in New Zealand despite the phenomenal growth of
this discipline in recent years,” he said.
A second
award, of $2.7 million, is going to the University of
Auckland for work on a nursing and health consortium to
ensure the discipline can play a fuller role in academic
research. Dr Cullen said that research will create
opportunities for new knowledge to be passed on to the
health sector, ultimately benefiting the health and
well-being of all New Zealand families.
The third award
will see Massey University receive $2 million to enhance
veterinary and large-animal-science research capability.
Networks will be created to encourage collaboration and to
support technicians in becoming active researchers in this
field.
Worldwatch
Colombia University President takes
on Ahmadinejad
In what might easily prove to be the
most-discussed university lecture of the decade, the
President of Columbia University, Lee C. Bollinger, squared
off against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran in a forum
on Monday afternoon from the United States institution’s
student union.
Dr Bollinger, who had been widely
criticised for inviting Mr Ahmadinejad to the campus at all,
opened the forum with a long interrogation of the Iranian
leader’s human-rights record. In a remarkably blunt
introduction, Dr Bollinger said Ahmadinejad exhibited all
the signs of a petty and cruel dictator and that he doubted
he would have the intellectual courage to answer his
questions.
To an audience of 600, Dr Bollinger cited the
Iranian government's “brutal crackdown” on dissidents,
public executions, executions of minors and other actions,
and assailed Ahmadinejad’s denial of the Holocaust as
ridiculous. “For the illiterate and ignorant, this is
dangerous propaganda,” he said, adding that the Iranian
leader was “either brazenly provocative or astonishingly
uneducated”.
After weeks of protest, the lecture was
held in an atmosphere of heavy security with university
guards stationing themselves at each of the campus’s
entrances, allowing only people with Columbia identification
cards to pass through. Later in the morning, the police
briefly closed down sidewalks near the University.
For
his part, Mr Ahmadinejad issued an open invitation to
Columbia faculty members and students to visit Iranian
universities. “You are welcome to visit any university you
choose inside Iran,” he said. “There are over 400
universities in our country, and you can choose whichever
you want to visit. We will give you a platform, and we will
respect you 100 percent.”
From CNN and the Chronicle
of Higher Education
Dismissal hearing suppressed
In
what seems an unusual move, the Australian Industrial
Relations Commission (IRC) has suppressed proceedings
involving a professor who claims she was unfairly sacked
from the financially troubled Graduate School of Management
(GSM) at Macquarie University. It appears, however, that
neither the GSM nor the dismissed professor sought to have
the case conducted behind closed doors.
Professor Rae
Weston, who is challenging her forced redundancy by the
University, was selected for redundancy after the GSM’s
new Dean conducted a review of staff competency. Professor
Weston claims to have been unfairly singled out after making
unfavourable allegations about the organisation’s
management.
Not only has the IRC refused to allow The
Australian access to the hearing, it has also refused to
consider an application from the newspaper for leave to seek
the lifting of the order for the proceedings to be
suppressed.
Two security staff are reported to have
appeared at the hearing and stayed close to The
Australian’s representative in the otherwise deserted
public area until the proceedings inside the Commission were
adjourned.
It is understood the Commission imposed the
private hearing order because of documents regarded as
commercial-in-confidence that have been submitted during
Professor Weston’s case.
The GSM is reported to have
dealings with many private companies as part of its
operations.
The Australian
AAUP urges university
presidents to stand firm
The American Association of
University Professors has sent an open letter to 3,000
university presidents, urging them not to bow to public
pressure to cancel invitations to controversial speakers in
the run-up to the 2008 United States presidential
election.
The letter was prompted by discussions with
university presidents about the pressures brought upon them
to avoid controversy. In one case cited by AAUP, a president
said that a donor had threatened to withdraw a $US10 million
pledge if an invitation to a controversial speaker was not
cancelled.
AAUP President, Cary Nelson, said he hoped
universities would distribute copies of the letter to donors
and outside parties to defuse tensions before they mount.
“We believe education is best served by the free pursuit
of all ideas, including controversial ones. The university
does not endorse a particular speaker’s view any more than
it endorses the content of a particular book in its
library,” the letter read.
The letter also reassures
university presidents that having controversial speakers on
a campus, particularly those who advance political
viewpoints, does not endanger the university’s tax-exempt
status.
The AAUP has criticised the University of
California for cancelling an invitation last week to the
former Harvard University President Lawrence H. Summers who
was to have spoken at a Board of Regents dinner.
UCL sued
over £500 million deal
An academic who made a discovery
worth more than £500 million ($NZ1,362 million) a year to
the pharmaceutical industry is suing University College
London in the United Kingdom for unlimited damages, claiming
the College has denied him a proper share of the spoils.
Geoffrey Goldspink, Emeritus Professor of Anatomy at the
Royal Free and UCL Medical School, claims UCL and its
technology spin-off company, UCL Business, withheld his full
share of earnings from his ground-breaking discovery of a
substance that repairs damaged muscle. He also alleges that
the College stopped his vital research by closing down his
laboratory.
Professor Goldspink, who has spent more than
thirty-five years researching the development of muscle
tissue, has cloned a gene that increases production of
“mechano growth factor” (MGF). MGF activates muscle stem
cells and promotes muscle growth. The research suggests it
may repair damage caused by heart attacks, reduce muscle
loss related to ageing and help treat muscle-wasting
illnesses such as motor neurone disease.
According to
particulars of the claim filed at the High Court, UCL
Business employed Professor Goldspink as a consultant and
director of a research project on MGF. The company later
signed an agreement with a multinational pharmaceutical
company for the exploitation of MGF which envisaged annual
global sales of the drug of more than $1 billion.
In
March 2006, UCL Business terminated its contract with the
Professor and made his international research team
redundant. Three months later, a UCL Business Director
confirmed that the work was “being continued under a
commercial agreement with a large pharmaceutical company”.
Professor Goldspink claims the company had no right to
terminate his research and that his contract entitles him to
27 percent of income resulting from MGF patents. He alleges
that while UCL Business had received more than $1.25 million
from the drug company, it has failed to pay all the money
owing to him.
From The Times Higher Education
Supplement
When professors just can’t get along
The
American Association of University Professors, a champion of
open debate and free exchange, is apparently having some
difficulties with the nature of debate in its own
“virtual” house. Last week the Association decided to
close down its listserv, saying that, in recent weeks, many
subscribers have withdrawn from the list, complaining of the
nature and tone of some of the postings. More recently,
anonymous messages containing allegations against other
members have been posted, raising possible legal concerns.
The AAUP said its listserv had been losing readership
and drawing complaints for months. Its leaders discussed
what to do about it and considered options such as
moderating the discussion or shutting it down, but opposed
the idea of moderating the discussions for fear that would
limit academic freedom.
Inside Higher
Education
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz