There has been a lot of coverage of the suicide of Professor Stefan
Grimm of Imperial College London and the pressure he was under to fulfill
the expectations of being a professor. These expectations were NOT
about publishing, teaching, mentoring, invention, creativity or new
intellectual frontiers. Instead they were about raising money for the
University. In fact, they seemed to have very little to do with what a
traditional understanding of a professorial role might involve.
Although there is quite a lot of published correspondence on this
case (from and to Professor Grimm, and about him), it is unlikely that
we will ever know the full story. Corridor conversations and backroom
chats leave a scant evidential trail.
If a member of staff commits suicide because of pressure of work one
would expect that workplace to ask serious questions about its practices
and culture. One might even, from the point of view of human decency,
expect a few resignations. After all, a human life has been finished and
the suicide victim makes a direct link between his impending suicide
and pressure from work. But, to the best of my knowledge, no one has
resigned. A human being is dead. The blame lies at the door of the
University. The University … well … continues as normal. So how can this
be the case?
The primary answer lies in the fiction that Universities manage to
create that they are systems rather than amalgams of people.
Universities, through the prioritisation of a set of bureaucratic norms
and officer-holders, have normalised the view that they are top-down
corporate entities. A managerial class has always played a role in
modern universities, but this class has grown in size and influence as
universities have been forced to compete in a series of markets. By
competing for students, research income, high achieving staff, and
‘impact stories’ a series of pernicious political economies have been
created. Rather than collegiate environments based on scholarship,
learning and creating space for innovation and thinking, many
universities are being reduced to sales offices with academics serving
as clerks for a new managerial class who wield coercive metrics.
The complex structure of universities – multiple committees and
chains of command – means that very many of us are implicated in a
coercive bureaucracy that is based on incentives and threats (that are
often veiled but nonetheless real). By complying with very basic
activities (such as uploading lists of our publications on University
databases) we are fuelling the metrics that are then used to govern us.
That is the pernicious thing about the system – we are all part of it.
In the case of Stefan Grimm, it is convenient to look for individuals to
blame (and I still hold out hope that human decency might spark a few
resignations) but the real aggressor here is a system that we have all
contributed to. We probably have bitched about it and groaned, but we
have contributed to its construction and maintenance. We have been far
too meek in pointing out the irrelevance of committees, metrics and
placeholders to the real business of teaching, research and sharing
creativity.
I have heard a few horror stories in recent weeks (from other
universities) about how younger members of staff have been shouted at
for not bringing in research income, and about how some staff members’
time has been bought out by 250% (surely illegal!). In cases like this,
we can point to shoddy practice by individual managers – and hopefully
they can be faced down as bullies. But the wider problem seems to be the
system. We may not like the system, but we maintain it.
So what to do? I do not have a grand manifesto (but am all ears if
anyone has one). Instead, I look at my own practice and the very small
acts of resistance that I carry out. The first is not to take too
seriously the managerial class and the narrative they perpetuate. Yes,
we all have responsibilities in a collegiate environment, but my primary
responsibility is to students and research – not necessarily to
corporate goals. I will avoid listing the precise everyday resistance
strategies that I use with the bureaucracy (I don’t want to get into
trouble) but the general approach of not taking bureaucracy and
bureaucrats too seriously seems to work. The second very small act of
resistance is to try to encourage younger scholars to follow their own
intellectual curiosity. Grants and publications will follow more readily
than if they try to game the system by mechanistically targeting grants
and ‘prestige’ journals. The third is to call undue pressure by one
colleague on another what it is: bullying.
From: http://rogermacginty.com/2014/12/09/imperial-college-london-why-has-no-one-resigned-possibly-because-we-are-all-culpable/
2 comments:
There will be no resignations at Imperial over the passing of Prof Grimm and his managers are so tied into the system that they will not, I can assure you, even at this moment, be feeling any personal guilt.
These creatures are so committed to the processes which they managed, and so utterly lacking in any personal principles or self-respect they simply regard us, sniping from the outside, as the deviants.
I refer to two recent high profile suicides at Ulster- Prof Stephen Livingstone, a brilliant lawyer at QUB who was bullied over grant income- and Prof Jim Bell, a superb business teacher at UU- tortured by management during a long sick-leave with clinical depression.
In Jim's case, Jim had shared an office with President Dicky when they were both junior staff....which shows how little Dicky cares even about his own buddies. No-one officially from the university even attended Jim's funeral and his wife was further annoyed by UU a week later to clear out Jim's office.....
This managerial cadre does not have a heart.....more staff suicides will come.....Academics are a high risk group as there are so many good people in the academic community who take it too seriously.
Just to assure all our readers that we ARE NOT all culpable....
Many academic and academic-related/support staff take career risks to oppose the sort of aggressive managerial behaviour which appears to have contributed to Prof Grimm's tragic death.
Some local union branch officers and ordinary members also take risks to protect people like Prof Grimm and the many staff at all grades who experience this kind of bullying and performance pressure.
Yes, we may not get that promotion, that sabattical leave, or some other perk because we defend our rights- but let me assure you, you probably will not get any of these things simply by being compliant. If your senior managers want you out, you will almost certainly go anyway! Any union rep will tell you that more than 90% of voluntary redundancy discussions result in REDUNDANCY!
WE ARE ONLY CULPABLE IF WE DO NOT STAND UP FOR EACH OTHER
So if you have a bullying management in your F/HE institution and you don't do anything- then YES YOU ARE CULPABLE....
But if you do everything you can, through a union, or by appropriate overt or covert means, YOU SHOULD NOT FEEL CULPABLE.
OPPOSE MANAGEMENT BULLYING IN EVFRY WAY POSSIBLE AND DONT WAIT FOR THE LETTER TO ARRIVE @ YOUR DESK BEFORE DOING SOMETHING.
I regret that we had a brilliant academic in one of my colleges who got into a personal issue with his manager which she then converted into a probation issue. Her new goals for his final probation year in research and grants were as high as his entire department had achieved in the previous year. The academic was such a decent fellow he did not even oppose her. He left the sector and is a freelance artist.
WE FOUGHT FOR HIM EVEN THOUGH HE THREW IN THE TOWEL AND GOT HIS PROBATION REVISED, BUT THE ACADEMIC STILL LEFT.
WE ARE NOT CULPABLE IF WE OPPOSE BULLYING....AND DON'T KEEP QUIET....
Post a Comment