By James Vernon
The restructuring of higher education and the privatization of the public university has operated through a series of vectors: the push for online education, the challenges to access and diversity, the tremendous increase in studentfees and student debt, the growth of management bloat. It has been met—point by point—by a politics of protest. These protests have made clear that those defending Public Higher Education at UC must confront a number of problems. I’ll highlight just three:
Firstly we must recognize that whatever the particular nature of the crisis at UC it must be understood as part of a broader transnational restructuring of higher education and the privatization of public goods.
Secondly at the heart of this resistance is not simply a critique of the corporatization or privatization of the university – for these have a deep history – but a diagnosis of a new and distinct mode of contemporary transformation: the financialization of university. Universities are now in the grip of a culture of finance that produced a global recession and an insistence upon austerity cuts to public services, while redirecting the burden of higher education on to student debt through the very type of sub-prime loans that got us in to this mess in the first place.
And thirdly, as I suggested above, our current crisis has been a catalyst for critical thought and has been generative of new forms of politics on and beyond our campuses. It is no coincidence that the humanities have been central to the debates over the future of the public university. The value of the humanities seems at best precarious in the new financial culture of higher education. But as has been continually shown, humanities scholarship remains analytically and politically necessary for our universities and our democracies.
But we are here today less to discuss the content of arguments already made than than to take stock of where we are now as the restructuring of higher education proceeds apace and has been met these past months by the Occupy movement and the criminalization of protest on our campuses.
In that spirit let us begin.
- Research Website
- Why I Restarted This Blog
Christopher Newfield
UC Daily Links
Book
Chicago Tribune review | Chronicle of Higher Ed interview
The Atlantic article | SB Independent articles 1 and 2
LARB review | John McGowan review | Decasia review
Radical Teacher review | Salon analysis | Public Books review
Future Trends interview | Full Stop interview pt 1 and 2
symplokē review | Change Magazine review
Frequent Labels
Labels
- ACCJC vs. CCSF (1)
- Academic Freedom (57)
- Academic Labor (57)
- Academic Senate (29)
- Admin Responses (154)
- Administrative Overreach (22)
- Affordability (27)
- Athletics (5)
- Austerity (45)
- Budget (297)
- Cal State (28)
- California (49)
- Campus Safety (33)
- Closures (2)
- Community College (12)
- Cooper Union (1)
- Corruption (5)
- Costs (71)
- Crisis (152)
- Cuts (110)
- Development (19)
- Discrimination (8)
- Diversity (7)
- Economy (7)
- Employee Benefits (39)
- Faculty (98)
- Financial Aid (13)
- For-Profit (9)
- Funding Model (131)
- Furlough (12)
- Future University (27)
- Governance (64)
- Graduates (10)
- Humanities (32)
- Income (33)
- Inequality (44)
- International (19)
- Isla Vista Shootings (3)
- Janet Napolitano (38)
- Jerry Brown (43)
- K-12 (2)
- Liberal Arts (15)
- Management (49)
- Margaret Spellings (2)
- Mark Yudof (19)
- November 2009 (1)
- Online Education (42)
- Pension (19)
- Politics (71)
- Privatization (42)
- Protests (79)
- Public Funding (93)
- Public vs. Private (76)
- Quality (27)
- Race (24)
- Religion & Culture (5)
- Research (34)
- STEM (10)
- Shared Governance (37)
- Steven Salaita (6)
- Strategies & Goals (59)
- Students (61)
- Tenure (10)
- Transparency (15)
- Tuition Hikes (28)
- UC (243)
- UC Berkeley (39)
- UC Care (18)
- UC Davis (17)
- UC Irvine (4)
- UC Los Angeles (6)
- UC Regents (81)
- UC Riverside (11)
- UC Santa Barbara (25)
- UCOF (21)
- UCOP (64)
- Unions (19)
- University of Missouri (1)
- University of Wisconsin System (8)
- Vegara vs. California (1)
All Posts
All Posts
-
▼
2011
(125)
-
▼
December
(18)
- Notes from the Underground: Legislative Hearing on...
- We Don't Have Teachers at Western Governor's Unive...
- Links for December 20--Special Grinch Edition
- Who’s Really Making Policy at Your Campus?
- Debt, Democracy, and the Public University
- Two Totalities of Crisis
- Delegitimate UC Administration
- When The Public University Can No Longer Afford It...
- Debt, Democracy, and the Future of the Public Univ...
- There Are Alternatives to the Yudof Privatization ...
- Debt, Democracy, and the Future of the Public Univ...
- Links for December 9
- Links for December 7
- Links for December 5
- Protest: Only the Pro, Not the Test
- Links for December 2
- November's Steps toward Democracy
- Links for December 1 (Updated Below)
-
▼
December
(18)
Blogroll
- Academic Jobs Wiki
- Calitics
- Campaign for the Public University (UK)
- Changing Universities
- Citizen of Somewhere Else (SUNY Issues)
- Cloudminder
- Critical Education (UK)
- Easily Distracted (Timothy Burke)
- Edu-Factory
- Exquisite Life (UK)
- Higher Ed Watch
- Higher Education - The Guardian (UK)
- Homeless Adjunct
- Humanities Think Talk
- In Socrates' Wake
- Keep California's Promise
- Magna Charta Observatory (Bologna)
- New Deal for the Humanities
- New Faculty Majority
- Occupy Colleges
- Postgraduate Worker (UK)
- PrawfsBlawg
- Quality Public Higher Education
- Recession Realities in Higher Education Blog
- Reclaim UC
- Reclamations
- Sciences Carré Blog (France)
- Student Activism
- Texas Tribune - Higher Ed
- The California Professor
- The Quick and the Ed
- UC Faculty Supporting Students
- UC Pay Search Tool
- UCLA Faculty Association Blog
- Universitas (France)
- University Diaries (Margaret Soltan)
- University of Oregon Matters
- University Probe
- We Are Not Rats (Scotland)
1 comments:
Student loan debt is a ticking time bomb. We have mortgaged the future of the young to financial institutions. The culture of personal of responsibility promoted by Reaganites three decades ago has morphed into the economics of indentured servitude to debt.
Join the Conversation
Note: Firefox is occasionally incompatible with our comments section. We apologize for the inconvenience.