Mark Yudof has been nominated to move from being the head of the University of Texas system to the presidency of the University of California system. I'm completely relieved that we found someone who has been running a big public university system and who has a record of fighting state governments for more public funding. Basic arithmetic shows that public universities are great only when they receive serious public funding: here's my Planning and Budget committee report on the UC case.
Here are two pieces by Yudof, both originally published in the Chronicle of Higher Education. The first is on the decline of public funding for public higher ed, and the second on the value of university systems to their states.
There are things to debate, but I'm also relieved that we may get a president who's given public funding this much lucid thought, and started writing about it in the early 1990s.
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
- Academic Freedom (46)
- Academic Labor (55)
- Academic Senate (29)
- ACCJC vs. CCSF (1)
- Admin Responses (152)
- Administrative Overreach (20)
- Affordability (27)
- Athletics (5)
- Austerity (44)
- 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 (7)
- Diversity (7)
- Economy (6)
- Employee Benefits (39)
- Faculty (97)
- Financial Aid (13)
- For-Profit (9)
- Funding Model (126)
- Furlough (12)
- Future University (27)
- Governance (63)
- Graduates (10)
- Humanities (26)
- Income (33)
- Inequality (44)
- International (19)
- Isla Vista Shootings (3)
- Janet Napolitano (38)
- Jerry Brown (43)
- K-12 (2)
- Liberal Arts (14)
- Management (46)
- Margaret Spellings (2)
- Mark Yudof (19)
- November 2009 (1)
- Online Education (42)
- Pension (19)
- Politics (71)
- Privatization (42)
- Protests (78)
- Public Funding (89)
- Public vs. Private (76)
- Quality (27)
- Race (23)
- Religion & Culture (5)
- Research (33)
- Shared Governance (36)
- STEM (10)
- 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)
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:
Chris, but what are your thoughts about the fact that Yudof oversaw the massive and now irreversible tuition deregulation plan while he was chancellor of the UT system?
Join the Conversation
Note: Firefox is occasionally incompatible with our comments section. We apologize for the inconvenience.