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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFrom California to Chicago, A Call for Unionized Universities
from Dissent magazine:
From California to Chicago, A Call for Unionized Universities
By Elizabeth Tandy Shermer - February 18, 2014
[font size="1"]Student support for the University of Illinois Chicago faculty union (UICUF/Facebook)[/font]
Editors note: As of the morning of Tuesday, February 18, faculty at the University of Illinois Chicago are on strike over a contract dispute.
One of the twentieth centurys great public intellectuals, Tony Judt, once wrote:
By far the best thing about America is its universities. Not Harvard, [or] Yale . . . though marvelous, they are not distinctively American; their roots reach across the ocean to Oxford, Heidelberg, and beyond. Nowhere else in the world, however, can boast such public universities. You drive for miles across a godforsaken midwestern scrubscape, pockmarked by billboards, Motel 6s, and a military parade of food chains, when like some pedagogical mirage . . . there appears . . . a library! And not just any library: at Bloomington, the University of Indiana boasts a 7.8-million-volume collection in more than nine hundred languages . . . . A little over a hundred miles northwest across another empty cornscape there comes into view the oasis of Champaign-Urbana: an unprepossessing college town housing a library of over ten million volumes.
A hundred-odd miles further north lies another landmark in the American public higher education system: the University of Illinois Chicago. With 28,000 students, UIC is the largest university in the Chicago area, public or private. It is also the first major public university in Illinois with a unionized facultywhose current battle with the administration puts UIC on the front lines of the present-day crisis in higher education, economic justice, and democratic governance.
The state research university, that hallmark of Americas egalitarian promise, is at a crossroads. Looming ahead is a market-oriented university ever more beholden to the whims of cost-cutting corporate benefactors. But there is an alternative path, toward a social democratic university responsive to the needs of students, faculty, and surrounding communitiesthat is to say, the public that actually owns these institutions. That way forward, recalling the founding mission of Americas great public universities, demands a unionized staff front and center.
The contemporary crisis in state higher education did not result from an absolute scarcity of money, but rather from an unwillingness to safeguard, manage, and fund this most basic public good. That is why staff, graduate students, and faculty must embrace militancy and advocacythe ingredients of the sort of self-governance and common ownership at the heart of social democracyto demand fully unionized universities. A voice and a vote in university affairs should not lie merely in student councils or faculty senates but in staff, graduate student, and faculty unions, whose rights are protected by state and federal law and whose necessity is clear at a moment when public higher education is increasingly run for and like a business. ....................(more)
The complete piece is at: http://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/from-california-to-chicago-a-call-for-unionized-universities
mike_c
(36,281 posts)My union is in contract negotiations now, too. We understand that hard assed bargaining is only half of the solution-- we MUST convince state legislatures to reinvest in high quality, low cost public higher education. In my state, California, many of the legislators who today vote time and again to cut public investment in education were themselves the direct beneficiaries of the state compact for higher ed that created the California State University as the "people's university." Low cost, high quality university education, accessible to all qualified citizens. Those same legislators, after going to school themselves for free or at vanishingly low cost in the 60s, 70s, and 80s, now force tuition hike after tuition hike on students and parents by cutting state investment in higher education. An investment that, in California, returns more than four dollars in revenue generation for every dollar spent. Today, we invest more in prisons than in higher ed. How wrong headed is that?
riderinthestorm
(23,272 posts)riderinthestorm
(23,272 posts)and 4 recs?
Shameful.
Late night kick.
El_Johns
(1,805 posts)for a pittance, with big corporate salaries for bloated administrations that do nothing but play big time politics. Plus acres of buildings bearing the name of some capitalist's grandma or something.
alcibiades_mystery
(36,437 posts)Solidarity.
We're workers just like you.