• Home
  • About Us
  • Guest Posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

 

MLA Convention, New Orleans on January 11, 2025
To the Officers and Members of MLA Executive Council: 

We, the undersigned, resign from our positions as members of the Delegate Assembly of the Modern Language Association, effective immediately. Likewise, we resign from the MLA. We refuse to serve in this capacity because of the MLA leadership’s suppression of the Delegate Assembly’s right to vote on proposed Resolution 2025-1 endorsing the 2005 call of Palestinian civil society organizations to boycott, sanction, and divest from Israel. The quashing of this vote diverges from the due process that was followed to bring it to the Delegate Assembly.

 

In early October 2024, Resolution 2025-1 was proposed by a group of general members of the MLA. Despite gathering numerous member signatures in support of the resolution, going through a lengthy vetting process with MLA leadership, and receiving overwhelmingly favorable comments in an online open forum, MLA’s Executive Council stopped the proposed resolution from being considered at the 2025 MLA Delegate Assembly. Executive Director Paula Krebs did not meet with the makers of the resolution to discuss their concerns, nor did she respond to letters from the membership who raised their concerns. Throughout the months of November and December, several former MLA presidents published their letters of dissent and two EC members publicly resigned in protest, citing the “lack of communication and transparency” around the procedural vote. Even though the writers of the resolution followed all protocols to gather the correct number of signatures, they were met with silence by the Executive Council. This came as a surprise to many in the general membership as well as delegates.

 

As delegates from a range of humanities fields, we have invested significant intellectual and administrative labor in the MLA, some of us for decades. We have demonstrated a commitment to its mission to support “justice throughout the humanities ecosystem.” Simply put, when the Executive Council blocked the vote on the BDS resolution, they betrayed us as delegates and members. In doing so, they improperly prevented us from fulfilling our duties as delegates and from representing our diverse constituencies. Therefore, against this institutional and calculated violation of trust and protocol, we refuse to continue with the MLA and its illiberal and capricious leadership. Our walkout of the 2025 Delegate Assembly reflected our frustration with a governance structure that we have engaged in continued good faith despite a record of obfuscation around the issues of higher education and human rights in Palestine. This year’s suppression of the vote follows last year’s failure to act upon the emergency motion defending pro-Palestinian speech passed overwhelmingly by the Delegate Assembly. The MLA has consistently shown willful obstruction and obfuscation around Israeli war crimes and human rights violations in Palestine, which compels us ethically to resign collectively and not be complicit in MLA’s cowardly, preemptive capitulation to outside political pressures and, therefore, complicity with genocide. The recent decision of AHA’s Council to veto a resolution on scholasticide in Gaza, though it was overwhelmingly supported by members, affirms our sense that any statement in support of Palestinian life and liberation would ultimately be silenced by academic institutions.

 

We are unwilling to remain part of an organization that is complicit in genocide and scholasticide in Gaza, where all major institutions of higher learning have been destroyed by U.S.-backed Israeli attacks. Israel has killed at least 12,794 students and 759 educators in the West Bank and Gaza and has prevented at least 785,000 Palestinian students from attending their schools and universities since October 2023. By resigning from the Delegate Assembly (and as members of the MLA), we stand with our Palestinian colleagues who have called for international academics to “fulfill their intellectual and academic duty of seeking truth, maintaining a critical distance from state-sponsored propaganda, and to hold the perpetrators of genocide and those complicit with them accountable.” If our disciplines are to retain their integrity, we must actively work to undo ties to setter colonial regimes that engage in acts of genocide and scholasticide—a reality that existed in Palestine when the 2005 BDS call was issued and that will persist after the ceasefire goes into effect.

 

In resigning from the Delegate Assembly, we refuse to support an unethical organization that values its fiduciary concerns and political expediency over human life. Our resignation is an ethical and professional duty that reflects our concerns about the organization’s future viability and its apparent disregard for academic freedom and membership governance. If the MLA abrogates democratic governance, assembly procedures and accepted protocol to succumb to pressure from politicians and outside interest groups and/or align itself willfully with corporate and state interests, the Delegate Assembly effectively becomes an irrelevant body with no ability or purview to argue for academic freedom and just working conditions or to advocate for the humanities in times of crisis. And would such an enervated vision of the humanities be worth saving? What good, after all, are the humanities if we cannot apply our knowledge in the world? If we cannot materially oppose genocide—the gravest of crimes against humans? 

 

Sincerely,

 

Hosam Aboul-Ela, Rocky Mountain Delegate, University of Houston

 

Hatem N. Akil, Language Programs Delegate, Valencia College

 

Amit Baishya, Academic Freedom Committee Delegate, University of Oklahoma

 

Karyn Ball, Politics and the Profession Delegate, University of Alberta

 

Purnima Bose, TC Marxism, Literature & Society Forum Delegate, Indiana University

 

Sarah Dowling, Region 1 Delegate, University of Toronto

 

Katherine Gillen, Adaptation Forum Delegate, Texas A&M University--San Antonio

 

Rebecca Johnson, Romantic and 19th Century Delegate, Northwestern University

 

Boyda Johnstone, Community Colleges Delegate, Borough of Manhattan Community College (CUNY)

 

Robin Kello, Graduate Students Delegate

 

Karim Mattar, Global Arab and Arab American Forum Delegate, University of Colorado at Boulder

 

Nasser Mufti, 20th/21st Century English and Anglophone Forum Delegate, University of Illinois at Chicago

 

Kalyan Nadiminti, English and Anglophone Forum Delegate, Northwestern University

 

Angela Naimou, Politics and the Profession Delegate, Clemson University

 

Janet Neigh, LLC Canadian Forum Delegate, Penn State Erie

 

Kaneesha Parsard, CLCS Global Anglophone Delegate, University of Chicago

 

Trisha Remetir, Asian American LLC Delegate, UC Riverside

 

Juno Richards, LGBTQ in the Profession Delegate, Yale University

 

Stephen Sheehi, Mid-Atlantic States Delegate, William & Mary

 

Elizabeth Sheehan, Women and Gender in the Profession Delegate, Ohio State University

 

Levi Thompson, LLC West Asian Delegate, University of Texas at Austin

 

Katie Walkiewicz, Indigenous Literatures of the United States and Canada Delegate, UCSD

 

Jini Watson, Postcolonial Forum Delegate, University of Melbourne


DATED March 10, 2025

Posted by Chris Newfield | Comments: 0

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Mississippi River, New Orleans on January 9, 2025
To Executive Director Paula Krebs, Coordinator of Governance Leigh A. Neithardt, and Members of the Executive Council:

In response to your undemocratic suppression of Resolution 2025-1, we write to inform you that we are collectively resigning from the Modern Language Association. We no longer see the MLA as a place where we can continue to invest our intellectual labor.

 

About four hundred MLA members (including delegates, executive forum members, and longtime participants) have signed a pledge not to renew our membership. In addition, because the executive forum structure is the beating heart of the convention, a sizable group of members have resigned, are withholding labor, or protesting MLA’s actions by proposing a session on academic freedom and the Palestine exception for the next convention.

 

Resignations of Executive Forums en masse include 20th- and 21st-Century English and Anglophone Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, West Asia Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, 20th- and 21st-Century American Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Marxism, Literature, and Society Transdisciplinary Connections, and Postcolonial Studies Transdisciplinary Connections. Individual members of twenty-five other executive forums have also resigned and signed the pledge, including Memory Studies Transdisciplinary Connections, Medical Humanities, Sexuality Studies, Prose Fiction, Hemispheric American, Global Anglophone Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, and Poetry and Poetics Genre Studies. Twenty-twoother forums such as Sound Media Studies, Southeast Asia and Southeast Asia Diasporic Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies, Shakespeare, Creative Writing Rhetoric, Composition, and Writing Studies, Translation Studies Transdisciplinary Connections, Latina and Latino Studies Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, and numerous others who did not wish to be named for fear of repercussion, are withholding labor and/or proposing panels on academic freedom for Toronto. 

 

We list these names and numbers only to give you a sense of the widespread disaffection your arbitrary decisions in the name of fiduciary responsibility have caused among your members. Your actions will have consequences far beyond these numbers. The eloquent and principled statements of resignation, some of which we attach at the end of this letter, urge you to affirm solidarity with Palestinian people in this moment.

 

Indeed, we are heartened that you have recently conceded that our protests have had an impact, announcing processes to change the constitution in an effort to create a mechanism for the membership to make its views known, separate from the MLA association’s business interests. We believe that these proposed changes, as well as a perfunctory nod to scholasticide, are a direct reaction to the executive forum members’ and delegates’ protests. We are proud of the efficacy of our efforts and of the solidarity shown by all of the forum executive committee members and delegates who took up this question for serious debate.

 

These changes, should they take place, will perhaps enable MLA members to use the platform of the MLA to respond to threats facing higher education starting in 2027. In sympathy with colleagues who aim to move the MLA to action, we hope that these changes, while belated, will strengthen their academic freedom. We can only note with outrage and profound sadness that these changes have come through the abandonment of any meaningful solidarity with the Palestinian people. 

 

We are further dismayed that you continue to refuse to address the moral urgency of the moment. Neither vague promises about bureaucratic changes nor the obfuscation of their actual impact or the exact time of their execution is enough. Instead of investing more of our time and labor in the MLA, we plan to continue to protest in solidarity with Palestinian scholars and to find other associations and venues that are able to create the conditions for more meaningful engagement with all the challenges of our era, and are not invested in protecting the right to conduct business as usual amid a genocide.

 

Sincerely yours,

 

MLA Members for Justice in Palestine

 

[Below are statements from several forum Executive Committees whose members have resigned, are withholding labor, or are protesting MLA’s actions by proposing a session on academic freedom and the Palestine exception for the next convention.]

 

CLCS Southeast Asia and Southeast Asia Diasporic Forum

The CLCS Southeast Asia and Southeast Asia Diasporic Forum has dedicated our guaranteed session for Modern Language Association’s annual conference in Toronto in January 2026 to the topic of “Colonialism and Academic Imperialism: The MLA and Southeast Asia.” Our session responds to the MLA executive committee’s refusal, during the 2025 Convention, to allow the Delegate Assembly to vote on resolution 2025-1 endorsing the international Boycott, Divest, and Sanction (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights against the ongoing genocide in Gaza, and continued lack of clarity on future actions to resolve this situation. Scholars of and from Southeast Asia have long wrestled with overlapping histories of scholasticide, academic imperialism, and infringements on academic freedom guised in the name of liberal democracy. Our session foregrounds the expertise of our membership in responding to such conditions and explicitly addresses the role of institutions such as the MLA in perpetuating epistemological imperialism and suppressing academic freedom.

 

RCWS Creative Writing Forum

The members of the RCWS Creative Writing Forum Executive Committee denounce the Executive Council’s decision not to allow discussion on Resolution 2025-1. While we have decided not to resign in order to preserve the creative and intellectual community this forum has provided us, we support our colleagues who have resigned in protest. 

 

After serious discussion, we have agreed to voice our protest by tactically withholding our labor in the following ways: 

 

1) We will not put forward a CFP panel.

2) We will use our guaranteed panel to allow discussion on the role of CW in political crises.

3) We will not recruit to fill the two open positions on our forum.

 

We would like to underline that the Executive Council’s actions have made scholars reluctant to join our forum. The last person we had invited to join our committee declined in the following manner: “In the end, unfortunately, it's not the right time for me to jump into MLA service. Some of the reasons are personal, and some have to do with the current BDS discussions.” 

 

We regret that the EC has jeopardized our sense of community in this inflexible way.

 

LLC 20th- and 21st-Century English and Anglophone

As a direct response to the MLA Executive Director and Executive Council's refusal to forward members’ resolution calling for an endorsement of BDS, we, the undersigned, pledge not to renew our MLA memberships, following the 2025 convention, and to resign from our roles as members of the 20th/21st Century Anglophone Forum. Given that every single member of this Forum has signed this pledge, we see no future for the 20th/21st Century Anglophone Forum at the MLA. 

 

It is not lost on us that the ongoing genocide and scholasticide in Gaza, and colonization of Palestine more generally, are the occasions for the dissolution of MLA’s 20th/21st Century Anglophone Forum—a field that has arguably depoliticized the interventions of postcolonial studies. We hope the MLA takes note of this irony, and reconsiders its decision to disallow even the smallest stand against empire. 

 

TC Postcolonial Studies

We, the undersigned forum on Postcolonial Studies, do hereby resign from our positions in entirety. We cannot stand by the MLA Executive Director and Executive Council’s refusal to forward the resolution calling for an endorsement of BDS. All current as well as recently outgoing members of the forum have pledged not to renew our MLA membership after the 2025 convention and do not plan to attend future MLA conferences or teach MLA handbooks and volumes in our classrooms.

 

Postcolonial studies has been indebted to Palestinian scholars and activists since its inception and it is clear that the field’s commitments to anticolonial justice and assertions of humanity are out of place at the MLA. While postcolonial studies itself has much to reckon with, it is also a field that has wrestled fiercely with settler colonial critique. The ongoing genocide and scholasticide in Gaza, along with the violent history of Palestine’s colonization, must be a topic of serious academic engagement for the MLA to have any moral standing as an international convenor of the humanities, and the recent responses of the MLA leadership haves shown us the need to look elsewhere for the ethical pursuit of knowledge.

 

TC Marxism, Literature, and Society 

In response to your decision against advancing Resolution 2025-1 for debate and a vote in the Delegate Assembly, we write in our capacity as present, incoming, and outgoing Executive Committee officers of the TC Marxist Literature and Society Forum to resign from our positions. In your justification for this decision, you cited your responsibilities to serve as fiduciaries of the organization in a legal landscape in which numerous states have prohibited entering into contracts with entities who support the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions [BDS] Movement. We do not find your reasoning compelling. Rather than repeat the convincing arguments that eight former MLA presidents made in their December 18, 2024 letter to you protesting your decision—which inexplicably was not forwarded to the full membership—we will make three other points.

 

First, in the United States and beyond, lawfare has become a means to curb previously-protected forms of dissent; current and pending legislation in states seeks to restrict civil liberties guaranteed by the First Amendment of the US Constitution, including speech and assembly rights. As you note in your Report to the MLA Delegate Assembly on Resolution 2025-1, the ACLU and other organizations are challenging such instances of lawfare. In a political climate in which gerrymandered state legislatures and the Trump administration view silence as a green light to enact laws that further restrict freedom of speech and academic freedom, we abjure the MLA’s preemptive ceding of our rights to freedom of thought and protest. We do not agree that the best means of guaranteeing our rights is capitulation to restrictive legislative measures. Such measures should be vigorously fought.

 

Second, the BDS Movement emerged in 2005 as an initiative from Palestinian civil society to protest Israel’s decades-long human rights violations and brutal occupation of their land. BDS is a non-violent form of disobedience and a departure from earlier forms of struggle which involved armed confrontation. Those of us who advocate for non-violent resistance should support and applaud such initiatives from civil society. Indeed, the MLA’s mission is explicitly oriented toward justice: “The MLA supports and encourages impartiality, fairness, and justice throughout the humanities ecosystem.” In the face of scholasticide in Gaza, the encouragement of non-violent resistance in all its creative forms falls under this mission and we should be able to freely discuss these issues.

 

Third, our forum executive committee has been frustrated by the MLA’s impediments to facilitating basic communication with the over 500 members we are told constitute our forum. On several occasions, we have complained about your unwillingness to share a forum membership list with the executive committee and the “rule” mandating that all EC communications must be approved before you will forward them to our membership based on an arbitrary time schedule. As we have noted in past communications with you, these “rules” indicate a basic mistrust of our executive committee’s judgement, implicitly suggesting that we are not disciplined enough to send messages that are only related directly to MLA business. They have also impeded our ability to publicize our CFPs and solicit nominations for our committee officers. This mistrust is emblematic of the MLA Executive Council’s suspicion of the Delegate Assembly’s ability to debate Resolution 2025-1 and its opaque decision-making procedures.

 

Over the last few decades, many in the humanities have decried the dismissal of our relevance to public policy and, more generally, the public sphere. Your unwillingness to bring Resolution 2025-1 for debate in the Delegate Assembly is compelling evidence that MLA itself has substantially contributed to our irrelevance through a retreat from debating the most pressing issues of our day. We regret that the organization has abdicated its responsibility to advocate on this issue and others and, thus, demonstrate not only the relevance of the humanities but our indispensability to functioning democracies.

 

LLC 20th- and 21st-Century American

The MLA LLC Forum Executive Committee for 20/21C American Literature has collectively chosen to resign following the MLA Executive Council’s vote to withhold the resolution stating that members of the MLA endorse the 2005 call from Palestinian civil society to join the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement in opposition to the war on Gaza. The members of this committee agree that our professional societies should remain forums for open debate and that the MLA’s fiduciary responsibility is encased within–not poised above–its larger responsibility to serve as “a leading advocate for the humanities” when our work is under extreme threat.

 

TC Memory Studies

We write to you as executive committee members of the TC Memory Studies forum (G108) to condemn the organization’s undemocratic decision to refuse to forward to a DA vote the resolution to endorse the Palestinian-led BDS movement (Resolution 2025-1). As has been widely discussed, including in an essay by a number of the MLA’s own past presidents, the MLA’s legal and fiduciary justifications for this decision are both unpersuasive on their own merits and inappropriate as a response to genocide, scholasticide, and apartheid.

 

As scholars of memory studies, we cannot silently stand by while the MLA willingly participates in a culture of denial and evasion that has characterized the establishment political response to the genocide in Palestine. Our field was largely founded by scholarship about the Holocaust, and several of us on the forum executive committee study Holocaust memory, among other topics. Decades of powerful work in this field has taught us that it is not enough to oppose genocide and other atrocities long after they are over, as matters for pious commemoration. The animating principle of memory studies is that we must draw the connections between past and present in order for the lessons of the past to be meaningful.

 

The MLA is not its products or its database but the members who devote their time and intellectual labor to the organization. In light of the MLA leadership’s failure to forward

Resolution 25-1 for a vote, we hereby withhold our time and intellectual labor from the

organization by resigning as members of the forum executive committee and pledging not to renew our MLA memberships.

Posted by Chris Newfield | Comments: 0

Thursday, March 6, 2025

Thursday, March 6, 2025

UC Santa Barbara on February 11, 2014
The necessary long-term strategy has been nicely outlined by Eric Reinhart and Craig Spencer at the Boston Review. The public is more likely to support research funding that has direct and visible public benefits, like affordable treatments, rather than today’s funding that serves as an input to Big Pharma mega-profits and maximized care rationing for patients. They are completely right to say, “The path forward cannot be simply to defend the pre-Trump status quo; we must go far beyond it.”

 

The same also goes for the short-term strategy. The courts have stayed the NIH cut of indirect costs to a flat rate of 15%.  It’s good that universities are explaining what indirect costs are and that they are real costs. The Editor-in-Chief of the Science journals, Holden Thorp, wrote a strong editorial (“A Direct Hit”) saying how these costs work and suggesting that “these cuts should be a rallying cry for higher education to come together to make the case for the American system of research and teaching.” 

 

That case, however, will have to include direct public benefits of research that cut through the monopoly profit system—Reinhart and Spencer’s point—while also explaining the necessary public funding contribution to the initial research. People don’t know why the funding should be public rather than corporate and also how much money is required. 

 

There’s now been some progress on the public funding issue.  Universities and their organizations are starting to contest the core Republican narrative about research grants. That narrative is that grants make big money for the rich universities that have them. The conclusion is that lowering the research profits at universities won’t hurt them and will increase fairness and efficiency for the taxpayer.

 

The narrative is nonsense but university managers have never properly taken it on.  They aren’t comfortable with the reality they must disclose, which is that universities lose money on sponsored research, and plenty of it.  Big science is a big loser for universities.  If you were running universities as a business you’d get rid of sponsored research. In other words, you’d do what most businesses have done.  But universities aren’t businesses, though their leaders haven’t wanted to stress this point to a misinformed public.

 

I’ve stressed at length in many places—most recently in Liner Note 15 and Inside Higher Ed – that this has been both a data and a strategic disaster. No doubt university managers have worried than disclosed research losses would encourage voters to cut research in a (neoliberal) culture in which pecuniary gain is the measure of all things.  It’s a rational fear, but a bad policy. The result has been decades of miseducating people, politicians, business executives, and their own campus scientists, leading to general confusion about how expensive research actually is and why it depends on public funding and not just on Nvidia, Microsoft, and OpenAI.

 

The truth was always out there, but buried in obscurity. The Council on Governmental Relations (COGR), an association of research universities, has long published an annual report called “Finances of Research Universities.”  There they would regularly observe that much of a given university’s research expenditures comes from the university’s own “institutional funds.”  

 

For example, in 2008, COGR wrote, “According to the 2006 NSF Survey, Institutional Funds account for 19.0% of all R&D expenditures, compared to 12.0% of all R&D expenditures in 1976” (author’s files).  The real story of federal funding is that the share of total costs pushed onto universities has doubled to around 25% over the past fifty years.  

 

COGR is now getting more company.  Duke University officials have disclosed a potential loss to their NIH indirect cost recovery of $194 million, which is nearly the same as their NSF “institutional funds” disclosure (Table 22).  (Such reports encourage me to stick with my higher calculation of losses (I ran UCSFs), in contrast to than those from The New York Times’  national data base of institutional losses that relies on calculating indirect costs on every single NIH grant in 50 states.  I commend their heroic effort of public education on this key infrastructural issue even if I think they’ve come in rather low.  Dan Mitchell compiled their lower figures for UC campuses.)

 

In the past, universities have taken the hit rather than make a public issue out of it, and now in the current emergency they are now backed into a corner.  But the truth is slowly groping towards the fore. 

 

Another example: if a nerd like me reads the declarations in the lawsuit that led to the temporary stay on the NIH cuts, one can read the following from a Brown University official

Importantly, if NIH’s indirect cost rate is reduced to 15%, Brown cannot simply make up for the resulting gap in funding through alternative means. Brown’s full cost of research is already significantly more than what is covered by sponsored direct costs and indirect cost recovery. In the 2022 fiscal year, for example, Brown’s full cost of research was estimated at $315 million, which was $66 million more than sponsored direct costs and indirect cost recovery. Brown made approximately $37 million in additional investments, including through research incentive programs, cost-sharing, and other programs. And Brown took on $28 million in “unrecovered” indirect costs.

 

Great.  It’s paragraph 23 of one of many declarations and it goes on to say something confusing that I don’t quote here.  But it’s a lot better than nothing.

 

Meanwhile, COGR has moved into getting the word out with video animations.  The result is very good, and I encourage everyone to watch it if you need to refresh yourself on the basics. Here are two key moments.

 

Figure 1.




 

“Wrong” means the idea that Congress covers all research costs. “F & A” means “Facilities and Administration,” which have been capped at 26% for decades, regardless of actual costs. The key figure is the big number universities hand over.

 

Figure 2

 



Emptying the piggy bank is right.

 

It should go without saying that money-losing STEM research is not subsidizing the arts, humanities, and social science fields who mostly don’t have extramural funds in the first place. But apparently it doesn’t, so I’ll do a separate post on this later.

 

We can see this as too little too late, or as better late than never.  My heart says the former, since I’ve known this for 25 years, going back to a time when the country had a good chance of fixing the problem were it to have admitted its existence. But my head goes with better late than never—we now need to mad dog this issue and that means universities everywhere coming clean. 

 

Here we get to the next huge issue: the (public) university piggy bank didn’t have money in it.   Their money comes mainly from student tuition and state funding. Neither of these sources are large enough, and have been for quite a while.

 

I just watched the most recent University of California Board of Regents budget presentation (January 2025, Board, Finance and Capital Strategies Committee, 1’58” to 2’04”, discussion to 2’14”). it’s a good example of what I’m talking about. 

 

Knowing perfectly well that Trump was trouble, California Governor Gavin Newsom cut public higher ed anyway.  Here’s a UC Office of the President (UCOP) slide that sums up the breaching of the latest “Compact” that was supposed to assure reliable funding.

 

Figure 3.

 


This is some pretty dumb futzing around with the University by a state with a $230 billion budget. Newsom also insists that UC must take additional resident undergraduates even as he declines to pay anything for them.  The state has done this off and on for years.  There’s always room for more sacks of turnips on the turnip truck. 

 

The UCOP presenters noted that UC campuses have structural deficits, and the state is assuring they will increase.

 

Figure 4.

 



 

Even if the state funds what it says it will, UC has a half-billion-dollar deficit in 2025-26. And that’s before the NIH cuts were announced.

 

This confirms what campuses already know in the form of hiring freezes, grad admissions suspensions, course overcrowding, and systemic shortfalls in professional resources.  

 

And it also means that UC is not able to backfill the federal cuts with state money, not for one month, to say nothing of covering the coming cuts across the entire Trump administration.

 

The original federal research deal---1950s, 1960s—was that states would fund some of the research done at their universities because they got direct and indirect benefits.  State residents got jobs and paid state taxes, and also got skilled graduates and new knowledge. The past 30-40 years of flat or falling state funding (depending on the state) destroyed that tacit cost sharing.  

 

UC’s budget VP through most of the period 1985-2010, a shrewd and likeable guy named Larry Hershman, had decided that state legislators didn’t know what research was and had no reason to care.  So he never brought it up when lobbying for funds—it was always undergraduate education.

 

Throughout the 2000s, those of us on the Academic Senate’s Planning and Budget Committee (UCPB) literally begged Hershman on a monthly basis that he had to teach them about research. All of us classroom teachers face “don’t know and have no reason to care” in Day 1 in every course we have ever taught—it’s the proverbial “teachable moment.” Hershman always said it was hopeless and wouldn’t (and didn’t).  This meant that the state funding and student tuition cross-subsidy of research has remained the invisible part of the funding iceberg that sleeps beneath the surface. 

 

So now no one in state government seems to be in a position to understand the damage their permanent austerity budgets have done to UC teaching and research.  The Legislative Analyst Office’s new comment is a good example. Stop pretending you’re going to increase UC funding, they say to the legislature, and just don’t increase it.

 

The UC Board of Regents don’t understand either.  Their budget presentation lasted a total of 6 minutes.  The only real questions came from graduate student regent Josiah Beharry and another young person I couldn’t identify. Beharry pointed out that the university needs to rethink the compact with the governor if it’s “hurting us rather than helping us right now.” No comment from UCOP.  The other regents sat in total silence.  

 

16 minutes after the presentation began, Regent and committee chair Michael Cohen, formerly Gov Jerry Brown’s budget director, closed the session.  Cohen noted that the Board may need to look at campus budget problems more than it has in the past, but don’t forget the state has a deficit. So UC needs to focus on “long term ways to reduce our costs.”  In other words, Cohen is offering the University more cuts!  

 

The lack of engagement with decades-old campus budget problems is Board malpractice.  The refusal to deal with resulting quality problems is completely irresponsible. This is a frozen governance crisis, and UC finances won’t improve at all until faculty, staff, and students can find a way to overcome it.

 

The lowest estimate of UC’s losses to NIH cuts adds $427 million, bringing 2025-26’s shortfall to about $1 billion.  However, UCLA’s CFO told a town hall that $1 billion is the potential loss from various Trump threats just for that campus.   

 

So what is the real estimated problem? Official figures would be nice. In the meantime, here are mine.  

 

UC campuses spent $4.6 billion in federal research funds in FY2023. If we average indirect cost recovery rates at various campuses at 58% (UCSF’s NIH rate is 64%), UC campuses received something like $1.69 billion of that in the form of indirect costs [x=(4.6b/1.58)0.58].  One can easily come up with a scenario in which UC’s 2025-26 budget deficit is $2 billion.

 

Just to focus the mind, this comes on top of an existing shortfall in which campuses in FY2023 also spent $1.9 billion of their own “institutional funds” to support federally-funded research. (This and the previous paragraph are calculated from Table 22).  That has been covered with (inadequate) state funds and student tuition in the main. 

 

This all sounds crazy because it is. This is how the US funded research has been before Trump came along.  It’s not a normal we want to restore, and disclosing it is the only way to get to something better.

 

The regents can’t really see how bad the long term state trend is from Figures 3 and 4, which is what they get in meetings. UCOP sometimes has longitudinal charts in the Budget for Current Operations, but they need to be part of the live meetings where UC people and journalists sometimes attend. 

 

Here’s  the updated version of the state general fund trend (for background see The Essential Charts).

 

Figure 5. 

 



 The blue line is a benchmark, tracking growth in state per-capita income.  This measures the strength of the economy as it exists in people's pockets.  It goes up 4-5 percent a year most of the time.  If a state wanted to fund an agency in an average way, it would make that agency's revenues rise at the same rate as per-capita income. In such a case, the legislature isn't treating it as essential or special, but just letting UC or CSU or public health or transportation grow with the state.

 

The yellow line takes the per-capita income benchmark and corrects it for actual UC student growth.

 

The purple line is the California state budget (right-hand scale).  State government--health, corrections, transportation, K-12 education, etc.--has grown at around the same rate as personal income.

 

The red line tracks the state's actual general fund allocation to UC. 

 

None of this is corrected for inflation.

 

The chart shows that UCOP and the Board of Regents have failed over many years to keep UC’s state resources on par with state growth.  Regent Cohen is completely wrong to look for still more reductions.  The University has the opposite problem--lagging pretty much everything  associated with state government throughout the 21st century.  And this substandard funding when California is supposed to be a world-leading knowledge society.


Now,  when state funding is needed to fill in for some likely federal cuts, Cohen and the rest of the Board of Regents have left UC unprepared.

 

UC is certainly not alone in this.  Across the country, universities are enduring a “phony war” period like Christmastime 1914: World War I on research funding has started, mass firings are happeningagency leads are capitulating to the Trump administration, staff are furious and demoralized, review panels and grants have been blocked, and confusion has settled over the national pride and joy that is STEM research.  

 

While the cuts are still suspended, universities need to launch a massive campaign to explain public good research and its sources in public funding.  I’d like to think UC people could help show the way.



Posted by Chris Newfield | Comments: 0

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Tuesday, February 25, 2025

Outside Lafayette, La. on October 27, 2018
By Leslie Bary, University of Louisiana at Lafayette


I just wrote a mini-grant for $858, to cover flight and hotel for a speaker. To justify the choice of speaker and the validity of event, I composed a few hundred words, to explain to an audience out of field and possibly outside of academia why one invites speakers from other institutions to share their expertise. My speaker is a full professor and department chair at a major research institution. They are a noted scholar in our field of Latin American Studies. Their appropriateness as a speaker is not in the slightest doubt.
 

In the past, the $858 would have come out of a departmental speaker budget. I would not have to spend the afternoon explaining in words of one syllable why the event was being held and who the person was, nor creating documentation to prove I really had looked up and compared flight costs. But that was how I spent a lot of time today that would otherwise have been dedicated to research and teaching. 

I have been a professor for many years and before that, I was a graduate student with a teaching role. I have written many small internal grants. Initially, it was only one every couple of years, for special activities like summer research travel. Now almost every routine activity requires a mini-grant. The five-year vita I recently prepared listed ten in a category I now call “Selected Internal Funding.” A complete list would have crowded the document, since as departmental budgets shrink, funding requests for everyday operations are needed more and more often.

I have never been turned down for a funding request. Never. I suspect the reason is that the institution funds all legitimate proposals. I repeat, these grants are for amounts that in the past department chairs or deans would have controlled and would have simply authorized. They would do this not out of corruption or favoritism, but because they were familiar with the field and could exercise good judgment about it.

When I raise this issue, some faculty say they have given up writing mini-grants and only apply for major external grants. I am also a good writer of these, but major grants, at least in my field, do not fund everyday operations. And by major grants I mean grants from national research organizations like the NEH or ACLS. I do not mean fundraising. I also lobby civic organizations to support campus projects, but such fundraising covers different kinds of activities than do research grants to the Guggenheim Foundation. 

The mini-grants address needs not covered by other mechanisms. That is why I continue to apply. I do have some better paid and wealthier colleagues who dispense with the mini-grants and support university activities with personal funds, but they are few. Others take consulting gigs to substitute for the mini-grants, pointing out that if it takes five hours to write and then administer a mini-grant for $750, and they can raise $750 in three hours’ consulting, they’ll do the consulting. 

My research office suggests that applying for mini-grants helps us to reflect and articulate our research programs to ourselves. The fact is it doesn’t. Writing a book proposal or a major external grant can do that, just as updating and reformatting a vita can help rethink a career trajectory. But explaining basic things like why we go to conferences or, as I did for one mini-grant, why professors read books, does not help me clarify my ideas. At the outside, it might help explain what I am doing to an uninformed auditor. But that kind of explanation to such a person makes a negative contribution to my scholarly life.

The formulae for the mini-grants typically imitate those of major grants in the sciences, as does the idea that everything done should be grant funded. But in these fields, people spend as much as half of their work time applying for the funds they need to do their jobs. Rather than address that impractical situation, universities now replicate it at every level. The exercise seems particularly absurd when we are asked by our university to defend our job positions, or to explain that conducting research is part of our contract with them, and we are complying. 

But what is happening here? Every time there is a new, allegedly competitive, centralized internal funding opportunity, it is presented as new funding intended to help us, yet simultaneously, money disappears from regular departmental budgets and the regular library budget. A central committee reviews all the proposals, and individual units across campus lose autonomy. The university says this reduces “siloing.” In some cases it can be fairer since there are always people involved who do not know the applicants. But overall, it seems to be about a reduction in shared governance.

That is to say that every mini-grant application is a symptom of a department without a budget and, in the case of many of mine, a library without materials. When departments do not have budgets for research and libraries do not have them for materials, and faculty instead apply for funding to a mysterious committee in Academic Affairs, that committee has taken over functions that multiple department chairs, librarians, and others would have shared in the past. This is a concentration of power in a rather faceless group. Even if there were a Senate committee administering such things, the atmosphere would be less corporate. 

I note further that Human Resources nowadays is not a department of my university, but a service we have outsourced to a corporate “partner.” People who have increasing power over us are not colleagues or university employees. I wonder when the same will happen to the committee that judges the mini-grants.

What should be happening instead? Universities should restore department budgets for routine scholarly activities that are central to university education, central for undergraduate students as much as for everyone else. This would increase the use of decentralized academic expertise, lodged in departments, which would in turn increase the efficiency of the overall system. And it would reduce the excessive administrative labor of the many, many scholars in my position.


University of Louisiana, Lafayette on October 25, 2018


Posted by Chris Newfield | Comments: 0

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Saturday, February 22, 2025

Yonsei University, Seoul on February 11, 2025
I’ll give this to Trump.  He makes more and bigger mistakes faster than any politician in US history. And his mistakes are also more angry, insulting, and destructive than those of other politicians.  He is the GOAT in these areas. But we need to see this as a weakness more than a strength.

 

I was half-way through a post refuting the Muskian project’s claim to knowledge when I saw that the Post’sPhilip Bump had written it for me.  There’s been a lot of progress in the past two weeks about the Trumpian project as knowledge destruction, particularly through Musk’s military wing. 

 

lot of good knowledge work has been degrading Musk’s research credibility. For many people, it’s basically over. The Bump Rule is now widely in effect: “The safest approach to Musk’s rhetoric  . . . might be the one he wants to apply to government funding: reject it all as dubious until there’s reason to think it isn’t.”

 

The most famous example is that Musk’s big X announcement of widespread Social Security fraud, concealed by bureaucrats and exposed by DOGE, was based on ignorance of an old software program’s convention for dates.  A twitter swarm of experts posted about his COBAL knowledge gap.

 



 

Journalists wrote fact-checked stories. Others offered Musk advice about how to conduct actual research.  Many said that Musk should have some evidence of his claim before POTUS holds a press conference about it.

 

Journalists have been checking DOGE work in the way research colleagues would normally check work inside an academic research team before it is released.  They find low standards. “DOGE’s Only Public Ledger is Riddled with Mistakes,” the New York Times finds, having previously exposed basic mistakes with decimal points.

 


 

Bump laid out the conclusion about Muskian knowledge:

Musk isn’t very interested in the truth. His interests are in slashing government funding, undermining the political left and, where possible, both. So he kept at it, sharing numbers over the weekend that suggested the Social Security Administration had 1.5 million people aged 150 or older in its database, a subset of the nearly 21 million aged 100 or older.

 

Trumper error combined with brutality—fuelled by the stated desire to traumatize workers—depends on a multi-dimensional lack of knowledge.  It also depends on making followers think knowledge is irrelevant and opponents think knowledge completely powerless.

 

I’ll discuss some strengths of this machine before going on to say why they are vulnerable.

 

It intimidates people to watch Trumpism makes war on knowledge, civil service, skilled employees, general competence, non-corruption, constructive government itself, and of course independent expert authorities. Friday night, while firing the Black head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to replace him with a less qualified white man, and removing the first female head of the Navy, Trump also fired the senior lawyers in three military branches.     

 

It intimidates people to think about Musk’s treasure chest and the power to threaten every single elected Republican in the US with political extinction if they stray out of line. 

 

It intimidates people to think about the orc army of knowledge refusers known as MAGA.  

 

It intimidates people to think about civil service employment law being categorically voided through sheer arrogant executive belligerence. It’s designed to make people think, “no one is safe, including me.” And it does.

 

There’s Trumpism’s control of 2.5 of the 3 branches of government (it doesn’t quite command the lower courts). 

 

There’s Trump’s claim to be dictator and king, his unlimited aggression in the display of total power, his casual destruction of all relationships, and the apparent ease with which he intimidates even billionaire oligarchs through threats of retaliation.  

 

Trumpism draws power from its anger and violence, coupled with its confusion and ignorance.  Violence that cannot be addressed with facts, arguments, or other elements of reason is the most frightening kind.  Trumpism channels the political version of the culture of casual abuse, masquerading as a special vitalism, and carrying a head on a pike.

 

This nexus of threat turns wrongness itself is a power, as Bump notes about DOGE’s repeated bungling. 

The result is a weird variant of the Dunning-Kruger effect, in which Musk and his lackeys appear to know too little about how government systems work to understand what they don’t know. Instead of then realizing the gaps in that knowledge and tempering future comments, Musk builds a defensive position around his claims, constructed of partisan tropes and attacks on his critics. It unfairly reinforces skepticism in the government. But that’s entirely the point.

 

All this is true.  Wrongess in the pursuit of power is no weakness.  It proves the power. 

 

And yet all of this is not working as well as one might expect.

 

We should take stock of the fact that the reign of (t)error is revealing the limits of Trump’s mandate. Here’s a recent Post-Ipsos poll.

 




 

Trump has famously split the country, but the result is widespread revulsion for his policies.  Non-Republicans—the country’s numerically dominant group—give him majority support on only one of these 33 policies.  Three-quarters of his policies receive 25% non-Republican support or less. 

 

That’s a base to build on. It can assume majority rejection of Trump’s policies and decline of the status of Trump’s superstar Musk.  

 

Anti-Trump lawfare continues to expand and is doing well in the courts. For example, on Friday a judge extended the injunction on the NIH cuts. (The Lawfare tracker can help you keep score.)  

 

We’re seeing wide circulation of stories of the pointless immiseration of good workers, posing the biggest public test ever to Republican claims to care about working people as more than human shields for their tax cuts and giveaways of public resources to business.

 

The core premises of Trumpism can be readily undermined, sometimes in one image, from US history’s most repressive effort to erase words referring to women and people of color to the DOGE war on government bloat that doesn’t exist.

 



 

Then there’s the sheer repetition of the unending everyday Trumpian offensive: it signals that its victories depend on lying, cheating, and stealing, including public resources and people’s careers.  

 

Concealed weakness is also the meaning of the extremely belligerent treatment of Europe in the Munich meetings, or the escalating craziness of the CPAC conference, which brought a new Nazi salute—this one from Steve Bannon—and Elon Musk wielding a chain saw like the federal government’s serial killer. 

 

It’s important for strategy to stay clear about the weakness signalled by these things. Oppositional strategy has to be clear about the hidden meanings of the show. As Trumpist spectacle requires an ever grander ritual sacrifice, Trumpism will remind more people of the end of Dr. Strangelove on a loop, and see its destructiveness as an anti-knowledge project.

 

 


 

This brings me to the position of the anti-Trump opposition. To succeed, it has to bind expertise to a new narrative project, not move away from expertise in search of affective power.  

 

I mention this because so much critical theory and social science has decided that argument and evidence are relics of our failed Enlightenment and are no longer relevant to mass politics.  To put it more subtly, though the professional-managerial class (PMC) may still prefer rationality the masses do not, and this is why the PMC backstabs social movements and is despised by everyone.  

 

William Davies’ Nervous States(2018) made a good systematic case that affect has replaced reason as the medium of politics.  On this model, we are in the period of what the philosopher Brian Massumi (2015) called “ontopower,” operating through the intuitive and the speculative, leading to pre-emption, or Deleuze’s control.  Or in Carolyn Pedwell’s terms, understanding current technological society requires that we “relinquish our persistent attachment to human-centric notions of will, agency, and intentionality” (unpublished ISRF AI Group Paper). Trump’s rise, in its dependence on affective spectacle and bullshit of every kind, seems to confirm the need to cling no longer to fact-checking, argument and evidence. 

 

Many people have pointed out that the right beats the left in the department of grand narratives and affective attachments to them. But what does this really mean about the role of expertise in the overall ensemble?

 

The historian John Ganz has taken this issue up in his important history of the U.S. right, particularly his book on the Bush I period that produced Pat Buchanan and the culture warriors that prequelled Bannon and Trump. He’s come back to this issue a lot, most recently in a post about Republican mythic politics.  But to repeat the question, what is the relation between knowledge and narrative in a leftist mythic politics?

 

I completely agree that the left needs a positive narrative about the society it wants and why it would be so much better than what we have. It has to involve pleasure and liberation, and freedom from oppression, from the shattering of hatreds, and from the depredations of contempt.  I’ve written a cumulative and positive left narrative around higher education—many many posts of the 2010s on this blog, the “recovery cycle” in The Great Mistake, etc.  Some phases of this narrative seem reformist, some more radical, and all have fallen outside the Hallin spheres  of consensus and of legitimate controversy as policed by academic administration. (I like the Hallin spheres better than the Overton window.)  This kind of narration has to be built out for the whole range of institutions and communities.

 

This can and must be done.  It overcomes the endless distraction of playing defense, of being trapped in the unending series of critiques that have to be levelled at bad ideas coming from inside the house—from university admin for example—as well as out.   To build the alternative narrative takes discipline and sustained collaboration.  Both are really hard. 

 

And yet, to ask the question again, does the new narrative achieve mythic power only when it overcomes the limitations of intentional knowledge and critique? Ganz seems to be saying yes. He invokes a passage from George Sorel, quoting Sorel as follows:

The idea of the general strike, engendered by the practice of violent strikes, entails the conception of an irrevocable overthrow. There is something terrifying in this – which will appear more and more terrifying as violence takes a greater place in the mind of the proletarians. But, in undertaking a serious, formidable and sublime work, the socialists raise themselves above our frivolous society and make themselves worthy of pointing out new roads to the world. 

 

I agree that expert analysis has to join with and become a movement for it to change society or point out the new road towards it.  But I don’t agree with the opposition between fact-checking and the sublime strike in which the latter is the source of the new mythic narrative.  Ganz elevates Musk and DOGE to the level of myth, and writes

 

This mythic nature of these notions makes the liberal attempts to fact-check or dispute their contents piecemeal a futile exercise. The positivistic approach of liberal pundits, as expressed most characteristically in the unimaginative vox.com mentality, is completely out of its depth when it tries to deal with the policy merits or demerits of these new right-wing myths

 

We are indeed sick of our pathetic liberalism—and its enablement of the worst projects like Israel’s annihilation of Gaza.  But that does not include Vox’s fact-checking and other earnest and learned effects to expose lies as an essential part of the defusion of violent Trumpian control. 

 

The left absolutely needs to keep and to rebuild knowledge as such. That means radical knowledge and social movement knowledge and also very much knowledge based on professional expertise—on electrical engineering and ethnic studies alike.  

 

The appeal to the imagination has to arrive on this basis of knowledge if it is to arrive from the left.  The left is not about regeneration through violence, to recall Richard Slotkin’s great title incarnating the meaning of the US as a permanent frontier.  The right is about that.  The left is about the end of that myth, to misstate the title of Greg Grandin’s excellent book analyzing and debunking. the long violence of US national history.  

 

So Musk must be fact -checked.  We know that Musk is bullshitting us in the Henry Frankfurt sense of lying in order to control of the audience, and we know this because of some experts in things like COBAL and some medical statisticians on social media and because of reporters like Makena Kelly at Wired, whose editor set up a unit dedicated to tech in government in anticipation of the need to report out on a crusade.  

 

“Imagination” in the new myth cannot skip data, analysis, argument, persuasion, or organization on the basis of all these things.  It’s where the left’s new narratives will come from.

 

Posted by Chris Newfield | Comments: 0