Date: Mon, 04 Jun 2007 08:08:09 -0400
From: Dave Reed <ddreed@mtu.edu>
To: acadforum-l@mtu.edu, Jim Baker <jrbaker@mtu.edu>,
Anita Quinn <aquinn@mtu.edu>, wjmckill@mtu.edu,
Michael Gilles <mgilles@mtu.edu>
Subject: Chronicle Article on AAUP
All: FYI - the following article about the AAUP recently appeared in
the Chronicle. Dave R
.........................................................................
The AAUP at 92: Amid Declining Membership, a Venerable
Organization Faces Battles on Many Fronts
By ROBIN WILSON <mailto:Robin.Wilson@chronicle.com>
Washington
Ernst Benjamin has already retired once from the American Association of
University Professors. He has a white beard and receding white hair. He
just turned 70.
But these days, he is back in the general secretary's corner office, in
a job he gave up more than a decade ago. He was called in late last year
to help steer the association through management and financial crises
that threaten its very existence.
"I didn't have anyone else to go to," says Cary Nelson, president of the
AAUP.
The decision to appoint Mr. Benjamin exemplifies one of the AAUP's key
problems: Its image as a stodgy faculty club -- with an aging membership
-- that is no longer relevant to young professors, many of whom have
never even heard of it.
As the chief higher-education organization representing professors
nationwide, the AAUP is best known for its widely cited statements on
academic freedom and tenure. But in the last generation, even as the
number of professors in the country has doubled, the association's
membership has taken a nose dive, from 90,000 in 1971 to 43,600 today.
On the eve of its annual meeting here next week, the AAUP faces other
problems as well:
* A $250,000 budget deficit. The chief financial officer was forced
out last year after he failed to produce a credible audit report.
* A membership office that was without a director for two years and
failed to keep track of membership renewals, including $100,000
worth that were temporarily lost by the post office last year.
* A flood of departures among its top staff members, including five
who have left in the past 16 months.
* An international meeting on academic boycotts that was canceled
after an AAUP staff member mistakenly distributed an anti-Semitic
article to participants.
* Accusations by members of the Executive Committee that Roger W.
Bowen, who was hired as general secretary in 2004, failed to
adequately manage the Washington office. Mr. Bowen, who is leaving
at the end of June, says the job of general secretary may be too
big for one person -- and several association leaders agree.
Mr. Nelson, who is a professor of English at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign, has declared the worst of the AAUP's problems
behind it. "We are moving out of our period of difficulty," he says.
The association hired an outside accountant who has reconstructed
financial transactions, line by line, and will present last year's
missing audit at next week's meeting. New software will keep track of
membership renewals, and Mr. Nelson is starting an e-mail campaign to
attract more professors, sending messages this fall to 250,000 prospects.
Topping the group's management concerns, however, are broader questions
about its mission and its image. Thirty-five years after the AAUP
decided to enter collective bargaining, the decision continues to roil
the organization. More than half of its members are now part of an AAUP
collective-bargaining unit. The rest have no connection to the union,
having joined the AAUP because they support its historic role defending
academic freedom.
The split has created a schizophrenic organization, some say, that is
frequently beat on both fronts: by bigger unions, like the American
Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association, which are
luring away members, and by younger, nimbler organizations, like the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which want to control the
national conversation about academic freedom.
"The emphasis on collective bargaining, which is a game the AAUP is not
well positioned to play, takes away the strong role it can play in
promoting professional norms and academic freedom," says Joseph Losco,
chairman of the political-science department at Ball State University
and a member of the AAUP's National Council.
Those conflicts won't be on the agenda at the annual meeting. Nor will
the question of whether the 92-year-old organization will see 100.
Michael Bérubé, a professor of English at Pennsylvania State University
at University Park and a member of the AAUP's Executive Committee, says
the association is referred to as both "toothless and dangerous."
Toothless, Mr. Bérubé says, because young faculty members believe they
can accomplish more through their own scholarly associations, like the
Modern Language Association. Dangerous, he says, because others believe
that the AAUP's union activities corrupt its high-minded professional
policies.
Still, Mr. Bérubé asserts, the AAUP remains the conscience of the
profession. "Is there a need for the AAUP? Yes," he says. "Will it
continue to exist? Good question."
*Declining Numbers*
The AAUP started in 1915 to defend professors' rights to express
unpopular views. It produced such documents as the 1940 Statement of
Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure
<http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/pubsres/policydocs/1940statement.htm> and a
1958 statement
<http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/pubsres/policydocs/statementon+proceduralstandardsinfaculty+dismissal+proceedings.htm?wbc_purpose=Basic&WBCMODE=PresentationUnpublished>
setting out detailed procedures that colleges should follow to dismiss a
tenured professor. The statements have become ubiquitous in higher
education. Portions of them can still be found in most faculty handbooks.
The AAUP's membership swelled during the 1950s and 1960s. Some say it
reached 100,000 professors, but historical records have been packed up
and sent to a storage unit, so Mr. Benjamin says there is no quick way
to verify that. The surge in membership began during the McCarthy era,
when professors' loyalty to the United States was being questioned, and
the increase continued as higher education expanded in the 1960s.
But starting in 1972, when the organization entered collective
bargaining on behalf of professors, membership began to decline -- from
90,000 in 1971 to 75,000 in 1973. The decline didn't stop until 1989,
when the rolls reached a low of 40,595.
Since then, the number of members has risen slightly, hovering at around
44,000. But 5,000 of those are "fee payers," who don't necessarily want
to be members but are required to pay annual dues because they work on
one of the AAUP's 70 collective-bargaining campuses. In a sense, they
are anti-members. That puts the number of voting members in the
organization at fewer than 40,000.
Most of the AAUP's chapters are at regional public universities and
second-tier private liberal-arts colleges. And although the organization
was founded by professors at Columbia University and the Johns Hopkins
University, neither campus has an AAUP chapter today. Only a handful of
major research universities do, including the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and Indiana University at Bloomington.
Some blame the organization's recent problems on Mr. Bowen and the
association's 37-member National Council, which often functions like an
overgrown faculty department, with personality clashes, finger pointing,
and petty feuds. It is no secret that Mr. Bowen did not get along with
Mr. Nelson, whom Mr. Bowen has accused of trying to micromanage the
Washington office and of undermining him and other leaders. But the
departing general secretary also became frustrated with the monumental
task of righting the struggling organization.
Some council members accuse Mr. Nelson and a small group of his
colleagues of keeping others out of power and, in the process, running
the association into the ground. But the AAUP's problems were brewing
long before either Mr. Bowen or Mr. Nelson took over. They have more to
do with questions about the organization's mission than with who is
running the show.
*What's My Line?*
Despite its many problems, the AAUP continues to do some things well.
Since 2000 it has issued statements on several hot issues in academe,
including preserving academic freedom in the wake of September 11;
affording due process to part-time faculty members; and colleges'
handling of controversial speakers. The group submitted a brief that
influenced a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court case, in which the justices
exempted professors from a ruling that limits the free-speech rights of
public employees.
"We become involved in the crucial issues of the times dealing with
professors," says David M. Rabban, a professor at the University of
Texas School of Law who until recently served as the AAUP's general
counsel. "We make a real difference."
The association has also just released a report criticizing five New
Orleans universities that laid off faculty members and cut programs
following Hurricane Katrina (/The Chronicle,/
</daily/2007/05/2007051605n.htm> May 16). "We're the only game in town
producing these principled statements," says Mr. Nelson.
At next week's meeting, the association will consider censuring those
five New Orleans institutions plus two others.
Censuring colleges is something the AAUP alone has done since 1930. It
typically receives more than 1,000 inquiries each year from faculty
members who accuse administrators of threatening their academic freedom.
The association takes up only 10 percent of the cases, and an even
smaller fraction result in a formal investigation that can lead to
censure. Forty-three institutions are now on the censure list.
</indepth/labor/censure.htm> Colleges can work their way off by revising
their policies.
But even on a task it had cornered -- actually, that it created -- the
AAUP is now often getting beat. It can take the AAUP more than a year to
complete an investigation and issue a report. By then, faculty members
who originally complained are often long gone from an institution and
have little hope of winning their jobs back, regardless of what the AAUP
finds.
"Our fundamental focus is for the principle of academic due process,"
says Jonathan Knight, "even if the person is no longer there." Mr.
Knight directs the AAUP's department of academic freedom, tenure, and
governance.
Increasingly professors with academic-freedom complaints have been
turning to younger groups, like the Foundation for Individual Rights in
Education, which has a track record of moving quickly. It does not
perform lengthy investigations. It simply sends an e-mail message to
reporters, publicizing a professor's problem with administrators. It
uses news-media exposure to persuade colleges to change their policies.
Some accuse FIRE of taking up only conservative causes, but it does get
attention and frequently gets results.
At AAUP, says Mr. Losco, the Ball State professor and National Council
member, "we've not done a good job of getting out in front of issues and
making our case. There is a long tradition of wanting to be careful.
It's always a rear-guard action."
The AAUP's stand on academic freedom has also taken a hit, some say, in
the battle over the "academic bill of rights," a set of principles
geared toward making colleges more intellectually diverse. The document
was written by David Horowitz, a conservative activist, who has accused
liberal professors of espousing their political views in the classroom
and of penalizing students who disagree with them. The AAUP's leaders
have spent countless hours rebutting his allegations.
"It is pretty clear there is a problem, but the AAUP tends to stick to a
specific line," says William Pannapacker, an associate professor of
English at Hope College. Mr. Pannapacker is not an AAUP member,
primarily, he says, because he cannot afford the annual dues, which
range from $155 to $188 for full-time professors. "They have been slow
to assume a more moderate position," he says. "I think they might be too
orthodox and absolutist."
Donald Downs, a professor of political science at the University of
Wisconsin at Madison, started his own Committee for Academic Freedom and
Rights 10 years ago, bypassing the AAUP. He says the association has
ignored contemporary threats to academic freedom, which, he argues, come
from the campus itself.
"The vast majority of censorship within universities has come from the
left in the era of political correctness," he says. "In my view, the
AAUP has not been nearly as good on that as it was during the McCarthy
era, when the threat came from outside the university and left-wing
professors were being persecuted."
*Labor Pains*
What appears to have hurt the AAUP's image the most, however, is its
role in collective bargaining.
"The more that AAUP membership is dominated by trade unionists, the less
likely it is that the AAUP can perform the role that made it a household
name in academia," says David A. Hollinger, chairman of the history
department at the University of California at Berkeley. He was not a
member of the association until he was asked to be part of its Committee
on Academic Freedom and Tenure, in 2003.
Professors at elite research universities, he says, aren't interested in
being linked to a union. They don't need one. Faculty members at
high-profile institutions typically have powerful academic reputations
and can call their own shots when it comes to job duties and salary. In
their minds, says Mr. Hollinger, the AAUP's union aspect tarnishes the
organization.
Acting as union representatives has also depleted the AAUP's resources,
other academics argue.
"When they went into collective bargaining, there was always a question
of what value-added they were really bringing," says Clara M. Lovett,
who was president of the American Association of Higher Education when
it closed in 2005. "What does the AAUP do that the NEA or the AFT are
not able to do? I'm not sure that's ever been resolved. It may have
drained the AAUP's energy from other things they could have been doing."
Professors who are members of the collective-bargaining units says the
AAUP brings its venerable reputation to the table, making it unique
among the unions representing higher education. But at the same time,
these professors worry about whether the group has the power, expertise,
and resources to bargain effectively.
Some collective-bargaining chapters, including those at Wayne State
University -- one of the AAUP's oldest -- and Rutgers University -- its
largest -- have also recently joined up with the American Federation of
Teachers, while maintaining their ties to the AAUP. In Detroit, in the
midst of the auto industry, says Charles J. Parrish, a professor who
heads Wayne State's collective-bargaining chapter, it only makes sense
for the university to sign up with a larger, more powerful union.
Worried that such a trend might cut into its finances and reduce its
influence, the AAUP has prohibited chapters from reducing their dues to
the association if they add affiliations to other collective-bargaining
representatives. Some professors believe the association should sell off
its collective-bargaining operation to a bigger union, and the AFT has
been pushing to forge a formal relationship so the two groups can
organize on campuses together. Mr. Nelson says that while he is not
opposed to that idea, it is important that the AAUP stay in the game.
The American Federation of Teachers, he says, "doesn't quite have the
credibility on academic-freedom issues and shared-governance issues."
Maybe the solution, some AAUP members say, is to split it in two. The
association is considering a restructuring that would separate its
academic-freedom work from collective bargaining, creating two units
under one umbrella. Such a change would be intended to give each of the
two entities more freedom to pursue its own goals. Details of how it
would work are still sketchy, but members will begin talking about the
separation at this month's meeting.
The AAUP is also considering hiring two people to replace Mr. Bowen: one
to mind the office and one to be a traveling spokesperson for academic
freedom. And it is expanding its membership into the ranks of part-time
professors and graduate students, although their dues are so low -- most
pay only about $40 a year -- that the organization must sign up four of
them for every full-paying professor it loses.
To bulk up its finances, the AAUP has announced its first capital
campaign, with a goal of $10-million. It has raised about $1-million so
far.
More money certainly couldn't hurt. The AAUP's headquarters here is a
spare collection of offices with dark-green indoor-outdoor carpeting and
light-blue-green walls marred by black scuff marks.
A reminder of its once august heyday is tucked into a small room off a
main corridor. Embedded in a wall are 157 wooden file-card holders
filled with tens of thousands of 3-by-5 cards, each containing the name
and address of a member, the date he or she joined, and a history of
dues payments. Changes are marked in pencil.
One card traces Albert Einstein's membership, starting in 1935. The card
was marked "deceased" in 1955, three days after his death.
All of the association's membership records are now computerized, part
of the new software that the office has been struggling to put in place
for six months. If a member dies today, it could take months for the
AAUP to notice.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
David D Reed
Vice President for Research