The Socialist

The Socialist 17 February 2010

Fight Council Cuts!

Fight council cuts!


Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament

 
 
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Oppose university cuts - defend jobs

Universities today are under attack. The Socialist has reported in recent weeks on attempts by bosses at Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU) to cut 127 members of the university's support staff. Meanwhile, Manchester's newspaper, Student Direct, carried a report in December on the "involuntary redundancy" forced on Professor Hillel Steiner by university bosses, despite widespread protest from students and colleagues alike.

James Naish

More generally, there has been nationwide concern about the introduction of the Research Excellence Framework (REF) - a New Labour proposal to measure and assess research quality and publications.

The REF proposals have received widespread condemnation from academics throughout the country and the University and College Union (UCU) has been very critical. A petition opposing them received over 17,500 signatures. But the government refuses to listen.

One of the proposals contained within the REF is that 25% of its assessment is to be based on the economic and social impact of research. It is not clear how such a policy might be implemented, as the impact of a particular research project can rarely be predicted in advance.

The UCU has expressed concern, therefore, that research funding bodies would become increasingly averse to investing in research that was not guaranteed to produce a solid return on investment, thereby undermining research across all disciplines.

Academics fear that the impact proposal is intended to ensure that research funding will be used to serve the interests of big business and government policy, rather than to advance human understanding.

Against this backdrop of discontent, bosses at the University of Manchester are already preparing for the introduction of the REF. In September, all members of academic staff were given just three weeks to submit their complete research profiles.

Bosses were unsympathetic when staff experienced technical problems, meaning that many researchers were unable to complete the task. As reported in the national press, UCU members at Manchester are very angry about the situation and are now boycotting aspects of the exercise.

The hard line taken by bosses has caused concern that the results could be used to change lecturers' contracts of employment, to block promotion and ultimately as selection criteria for redundancy.

At Manchester University, the performance of researchers and lecturers is already assessed through well-established peer reviews and appraisals. Staff and the union branch are keen to protect that system.

In 2008, the Research Assessment Exercise (predecessor to the REF) was used by universities to justify the closure of departments, the sacking of staff, and the narrowing of research opportunities.

In a period of fundamental financial crisis in higher education, and in the run-up to a general election in which all three main parties have pledged to wage war on public spending, the REF will provide bosses with a tool for cutting costs.

The UCU insists that the use of results from the REF must not be used to influence job cuts, promotions or pay.

The Socialist Party calls on all staff and students to oppose all attempts to commercialise research and to cut staff at universities.


In this issue

Fight council cuts!


Socialist Party campaigns

Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


Socialist Party news and analysis

New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


Workplace analysis

The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Socialist Students

Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Socialist Party feature

Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


International socialist news and analysis

Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament


 

Home   |   The Socialist 17 February 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

University:

triangleDemo against cuts at Salford university

triangleUCU joins 10 May strike - student solidarity needed

triangleBrighton Uni: Socialist Students five votes from victory

triangleFighting Con-Dem attacks on education

triangle14 March - Socialist Students get a response

triangleQuebec: Students engage in 'indefinite' general strike action

Jobs:

triangleUN reports rise in global youth unemployment

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

Manchester:

triangle1932 - mass trespass won the right to roam

triangleManchester Socialist Party: TUSC and the local elections

triangleManchester NSSN: Pensions dispute update; & Regional pay - how do we fight it?

UCU:

triangleLondon NUT and UCU pensions strike demonstration

triangleLecturers in colleges and 'post-92' universities will join 28 March pensions strike

triangleUCU special conference

Universities:

triangleStudent walkout: Socialist Students show what could have been

triangleContinuing the pensions battle - Universities

triangleStudent walkout - build mass action