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Australian university refuses to reinstate sacked academic
By Mike Head
19 June 2001
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The University of Wollongong, south of Sydney, is continuing
to refuse to reinstate Associate Professor Ted Steele despite
international condemnation and blackbans by academics, as well
as widespread anger among university staff and intellectuals throughout
Australia.
A meeting of the universitys 18-member governing council
on June 8 blocked debate on three resolutions criticising Vice
Chancellor Gerard Suttons summary dismissal of Dr Steele
on February 26. Instead, it adopted a motion put by Sutton, urging
its members to await the outcome of legal proceedings against
the university by the academics union, the National Tertiary
Education Union (NTEU).
Steeles sacking is a direct attack on academic freedomthe
right to teach, conduct research, publish and speak, including
making criticism of university and government policy, without
fear of official or commercial retribution. Sutton dismissed Steele,
a tenured academic with 16 years service in the universitys
biological sciences department, without notice or any hearing
for publicly opposing the growing commercialisation of universities.
Specifically, Steele told a journalist that the grades of two
of his honours students were upgraded within the department against
his recommendations and those of an external referee. Steele and
other academics reported such incidents when asked to respond
to a national survey in which many academics complained of management
pressure to lift students results and produce commercially favourable
research in order to generate corporate sponsorship and student
fee revenue. Years of funding cuts by successive federal governments
have made universities increasingly dependent on these sources
of income.
The survey and Steeles comments received wide publicity
in Asia, where Australian universities actively recruit fee-paying
students, generating a large share of the $3.4 billion a year
that they earn from overseas students. Sutton dismissed Steele
amid strenuous efforts by the Australian Vice Chancellors Committee
and federal Education Minister David Kemp to discredit the survey,
and put pressure on academics not to go public with their concerns.
Academics and their unions internationally have denounced Steeles
dismissal and demanded his immediate reinstatement. They are boycotting
conferences at Wollongong University and blacklisting it as a
place of work. University teaching unions from Britain, Canada,
the United States, Ireland and New Zealand are among those that
have written to the Wollongong Chancellor, Michael Codd, protesting
against Suttons decision.
President of the 30,000-member Canadian Association of University
Teachers, Professor Thomas Booth, wrote: The Vice-Chancellors
actions show contempt for academic freedom, which is the cornerstone
of any university. His actions bring the University of Wollongong
into disrepute and cast a shadow over the entire Australian university
community.
British Association of University Teachers general secretary
David Triesman said his union had called on British academics
to avoid all dealings with Wollongong University because: The
standards universities must follow have to include an exacting
requirement to foster and support academic freedom. This is sometimes
tested when criticisms come close to home, but that is a test
no university can afford to fail.
The NTEU has reported that it has received some 2,000 messages
of support from academics and faculty unions around the world,
including in Europe, Asia and South Africa.
University staff members within Australia are also clearly
outraged by Steeles victimisation. More than 5,000 have
signed a NTEU petition expressing concern and anger
at Steels arbitrary dismissal, calling on the Wollongong
University council to direct Sutton to ensure that Steele is afforded
due process.
Wider criticism has been voiced as well. Nine prominent Australians
sent an open letter to the university council stating that the
universitys actions are cause for concern for all
members of the academic community, and more broadly among members
of the public who care about the integrity and accountability
of public universities. The letter insisted that academic
freedom is a right and responsibility of academic staff
which entails the right of all staff to freely express opinions
about the institutions in which they work.
Eminent science professors Frank Fenner and Ian Lowe signed
the letter, joined by novelists Jean Bedford and Peter Corris,
composer Roger Woodward, media commentator Eva Cox, Liberty Victoria
president Chris Maxwell, Association for the Public University
president Paul James and Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU)
president Sharan Burrow.
NTEU campaign evades central issues
By imposing bans on Wollongong University, demanding Steeles
immediate reinstatement and highlighting the threat to academic
freedom, the international protests are in marked contrast to
the NTEUs own campaign. Four months after Steeles
sacking, it has still refused to call any industrial action. The
union has not demanded Steeles reinstatement and instead
has sought to divert its members away from the fundamental principle
at stakethat of academic freedom.
Rather than defending Steele, the NTEU has sought to defend
its enterprise agreement with the university. Far from challenging
Steeles dismissal, the union has simply objected to the
fact that Sutton did not follow the procedures set down in the
agreement. The unions campaign centres on taking the university
to the Federal Court on July 5, alleging a breach of the agreement.
Clause 59 of the agreement empowers the Vice-Chancellor to
dismiss a staff member without notice where serious misconduct
has occurred. In the NTEUs summary of the legal issues,
posted on its web site, the union states that it does not dispute
that power. It merely argues that, under Clause 61 of the agreement,
Sutton should have given Steele a hearing before a committee before
deciding to sack him.
These clauses, agreed to by the union, have opened the door
for Sutton. Moreover, they are among a number of clauses that
have become standard in NTEU agreements with universities, giving
the managements unprecedented power to undertake disciplinary
action and impose retrenchments, as well as introduce short-term
contracts and casual teachers, to assist in cost-cutting and restructuring
along corporate lines.
At the Wollongong University council meeting, Sutton was able
to exploit the NTEUs stance to gag debate on motions criticising
his actions. His resolution not only invoked the unions
lawsuit as a reason to cut off discussion but also addressed the
union leaderships concerns by committing the university
to abiding by its enterprise agreements.
NTEU national president Carolyn Allport was quoted in the Sydney
Morning Herald as welcoming that commitment. Her comment underscores
the common ground between the NTEU leadership and the university.
Initially, in fact, NTEU officials refused to organise any
campaign over Steeles dismissal, on the pretext that other
members of his department did not back him. When staff members
at Wollongong and other universities began to voice concerns about
the implications of Steeles case, the union was forced to
change tack. It launched a campaignnot in defence of Steele,
however, but its industrial agreement.
Significantly, the union campaign has remained silent on the
key question raised by Steele and many other academicsthe
subordination of the universities to market requirements. This
is not accidental. For the past decade, under both the present
government and the previous Labor government, the union has worked
closely with university administrations to enforce budget cuts,
particularly in areas of critical inquiry, shut down departments
deemed to be unprofitable and restructure universities to meet
corporate requirements.
Statistics released by the Australian Vice-Chancellors Committee
on May 29 show some of the impact of this budget slashing and
restructuring. They reveal a continuing deterioration in the ratio
of students to teaching staff. Between 1989when the Labor
government launched a major reorganisation of the university systemand
2000 the ratio rose by 40 percent, from 13.50 to 18.84. When the
present Howard government came to office in 1996, the ratio stood
at 15.68. Four years later it was 20 percent higher, including
a 3 percent rise from 1999 to 2000.
These figures mean larger classes, over-crowded facilities
and less attention paid to students, not to speak of increased
workloads and stress for staff. They reflect an underlying shift
in the function of universities from higher education to meeting
the needs of businessboth in churning out thousands more
economics, accounting, management, law and information technology
graduates and in re-directing staff resources away from teaching
and into conducting commercially-marketable research.
In the face of these trends, Ted Steeles sacking has
become a critical test for the defence of academic freedom and
the future of tertiary education itself.
See Also:
Union undermines the defence
of sacked Australian academic
[20 April 2001]
Commercialisation erodes academic
freedom in Australian universities
[20 April 2001]
A test case for free speech:
Australian academic dismissed for opposing falling university
standards
[28 February 2001]
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