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Subject: <edu-factory> Andrew Ross - MIDDLE EAST: Rights,freedom and
offshore academics


MIDDLE EAST: Rights, freedom and offshore academics     
Andrew Ross*
01 May 2011 

http://www.universityworldnews.com/article.php?story=20110429165843773 



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Despite the carnage wrought on higher education by the Great Recession,
evidence persists that the sector is still host to a speculator psychology.
One example is the unabated stampede to set up branches and programmes
overseas.

Colleges have many reasons to go offshore: to reduce costs, to build their
'brands' in 'emerging markets' and to spread their assets. Some have even
been driven by genuine faculty interest in international education.

But the rush to respond to lucrative offers from local governments,
especially in China and the Gulf states, has all the hallmarks of high-risk
investment. In the corporate world, casualties of overseas joint ventures
are legion. It should be no surprise that several universities have crashed
and withdrawn from this line of business: a major recent example is Michigan
State University, which in July abandoned its Dubai campus.

Nonetheless, the long-term prognosis for such ventures is rosy. According to
analysts of the global market for higher education, demand will grow to as
many as 200 million 'seats' by the year 2020 - those currently enrolled
number from 110 to 115 million.

These data are based on estimates of the growth of the middle-class in
rapidly developing countries (which are recovering most quickly from the
recession). Studies show that the transnational student mobility of this
rising class is increasingly funded by private family wealth and is
therefore not dependent on state funding, which is shrinking almost
everywhere.

What speculative investor would not salivate at the prospect of a market
with a potential growth rate of 80% over the next decade? Yet the culture of
higher education is not well suited to the gold-rush mentality, and adapting
to it at high speed puts at risk some of our bedrock principles.

With those perils in mind, the American Association of University Professors
(AAUP), along with the Canadian Association of University Teachers, issued a
joint policy statement <http://www.aaup.org/aaup/comm/rep/a/overseas.htm>
in 2008 on the rights of university employees overseas. The statement
committed both organisations to support overseas faculty members and their
academic freedom, institutional autonomy, collegial governance,
non-discrimination and employment security.

For the first time, the policy addressed the rights and working conditions
of non-instructional staff, for example construction or maintenance workers.
To prevent universities from lowering their standards as they rushed to
enter the international sphere, the statement called for the recruitment of
a standing faculty of tenure-track teachers at overseas branches.

In drafting the policy, the AAUP's Committee A on Academic Freedom and
Tenure used the "Recommendation concerning the Status of Higher Education
Teaching Personnel" of UNESCO as a model. That recommendation was adopted in
November 1997, when the United States was not a member of UNESCO.

Members of Committee A agreed that this approach was the most effective way
of heading off criticism that the AAUP was advocating the imposition of US
or Western standards regarding tenure and academic freedom.

Because it was billed as the first full-service liberal arts college to be
operated overseas by a North American university, the Abu Dhabi campus of
New York University (NYU), which accepted its first students in autumn 2010,
will be an early proving ground for the new AAUP policy. With this in mind,
the NYU AAUP chapter sought to hold our administration to these new
standards.

The shadowy origins of the Abu Dhabi enterprise did not augur well. NYU
faculty members were not consulted about the decision to build New York
University Abu Dhabi (NYUA); the project was entirely the outcome of a
personal understanding between NYU President John Sexton and Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid Al Maktoum, emir of Abu Dhabi. Secrecy on the part of the Abu
Dhabi authorities, combined with the NYU administration's culture of
opacity, meant that all of the details about NYUAD were embargoed until they
were announced, at periodic intervals.

These covert customs, of course, run counter to the AAUP ideals of shared
governance and open speech, but they are not a-typical of the managerial
mould of the new generation of offshore ventures. Given the risks involved
in such ventures, faculty senates and AAUP chapters should insist on
oversight of the initial plans.

Another common problem is that overseas branches and programmes are
typically staffed by a combination of contract instructors and moonlighters
from local universities. From the outset, our NYU chapter officers pushed,
through various channels, for the university to recruit a tenure-track
standing faculty. The message got through, and hiring began last year for a
standing faculty that will be augmented by New York-based NYU professors who
will be lavishly rewarded for stints of teaching abroad.

Building a university with migrant labour

That was not the end of our concerns. Construction and maintenance of the
facility also ranked high. 

Human Rights Watch had issued harrowing reports in 2006 and 2009 on the
conditions of migrant construction workers in the United Arab Emirates,
documenting multiple violations of basic rights. Aside from the physical
hazards of their work, many migrants toil under years of indebtedness to
recruitment agencies - a form of indentured servitude.

Human Rights Watch had written to NYU, as well as to the Louvre and
Guggenheim museums, which were also building branches on the Saadiyat Island
site, to urge that contractors adopt fair labour standards. These letters
had gone unanswered, so we launched a campaign from within the NYU community
- through students, alumni, faculty members and trustees - to pressure the
administration. 

Because the campus was being developed by Mubadala, an Abu Dhabi state-owned
corporation, the NYU administration initially claimed that it had no control
over the contracts. This response was an echo from the early days of the
anti-sweatshop movement, when top brands like Nike at first insisted they
had no way of guaranteeing workers' pay and conditions further down the
contracting chain.

We argued that NYU's name on the degree was similar to the swoosh logo: it
was the product of sub-contracted labor, and thus not directly on the
payroll, but the brand entity should still be held accountable for the
conditions of the workers. No faculty member or student, we added, should be
obliged to teach or study in a classroom built on the backs of abused
workers.

The first direct response to these arguments was a statement from the
administration, in February 2009, that it was committed to respecting
existing UAE labour laws. This statement did not impress anyone at NYU, not
even faculty members who had by then signed on to shaping the curriculum.

Almost a year later, the administration announced a set of contractual
requirements for companies involved in construction and maintenance. The
list went far beyond UAE norms for migrant employment: it included
reimbursement of all recruiting fees, maternity leave, regulations for wages
and hours (including overtime pay), and a month's paid leave annually. Even
so, the requirements fell far short of those we had drawn up in conjunction
with Human Rights Watch.

Ultimately, too, such provisions are worthless unless they are adequately
monitored. Ideally this entails random visits to workplaces by inspectors
from an independent, non-governmental agency who report to regulators with
the power to punish violators. The likelihood of winning such an arrangement
in Abu Dhabi was slim.

Regardless, we argued that the university should take advantage of its
membership (along with 175 other colleges) of the Worker Rights Consortium
(WRC), which monitors the labour contracts of licensees of
university-related apparel.

Not only would the consortium be an appropriate, collegiate choice, but it
would also be a US-based option to which other universities could turn if
and when they went overseas. From the WRC's perspective, it would be dealing
with employers who could not cut and run, as is typical in the apparel
industry.

Above all, the choice of the WRC fit with our chapter's goal of leveraging
NYU's presence in Abu Dhabi to raise the bar on UAE labour standards and
also set a model for other universities to follow. If the Louvre and the
Guggenheim signed similar agreements, then our push for fair labour might
have a real impact on the region.

In summer 2010, I helped run a labour-rights campaign with artists, many of
them from the Arab world. We pressured the Guggenheim to up the ante on
NYU's fair labour provisions. In late September the museum and its Abu Dhabi
partner, the Tourism Development and Investment Company, announced labour
standards that came close to matching those of NYU, and they started
discussions with the Louvre on how to introduce a system of monitoring.

Yet progress beyond that point proved slow, so we decided to take the
campaign public in March 2011. At time of writing more than 1,200 people,
most of them from the art world, have signed
<http://gulflabor.wordpress.com/> on to boycott the museum until an
effective and transparent mechanism is put in place to protect workers'
rights.

At the same time, NYU administration announced the appointment of a
compliance monitor for the Abu Dhabi campus. The contract was awarded to
Mott McDonald, a UK-based consultancy that does business in the region.

This choice raised some questions for us, however. It is imperative that a
monitor be perceived as truly independent for its audit reports to be
regarded as reliable. Mott does not have a track record of public reporting
in its labour compliance work elsewhere. So, too, the firm has a sizable
portfolio of existing UAE contracts in public works and other large-scale
projects.

To some, the extensive range of these contracts might suggest that the
company is already quite invested in the norms of the construction industry
in the UAE, which are the very source of the problem for the migrant
workers. Alternately, this familiarity with the industry might be viewed as
an asset.

But to preempt the appearance of any conflict of interest, we think it would
have been better to avoid appointing a firm whose profits in the region
depend directly on securing government or government-approved contracts. Our
chapter had recommended a third-party monitor without any discernable ties
to government agencies in Abu Dhabi.

Academic freedom in Abu Dhabi

In the meantime, new faculty members arriving in Abu Dhabi in September were
dismayed to find that legislation that would create a 'cultural zone' of
protected speech and conduct around the new campus had been killed. The zone
had been proposed as a solution to the problem of hosting liberal lifestyles
and open speech at the heart of a society that proscribed - and in the case
of homosexuality, criminalised - such practices. 

>From the first announcement of plans for NYU Abu Dhabi, there had been
widespread scepticism about the flourishing of a liberal arts institution in
such an environment. How could the cultural ethos of Greenwich Village
possibly thrive on Saadiyat Island? 

The extra-territorial bubble of the 'cultural zone' was modeled on the kind
of immunity to national regulation typically extended to foreign
corporations in free-trade zones. But it was always an unrealistic prospect
for a university, since the protections would have ended at the boundaries
of the campus.

In its place, the NYU administration extracted agreements from the
authorities that the academic freedom provisions in the 1940 Statement of
Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure would be respected wherever
faculty members and students travelled in Abu Dhabi. In effect, these
protocols would be like 'roaming' privileges for cell phone users.

No less a form of extraterritoriality, this arrangement left faculty members
and students in a state of confusion about their rights. In principle, it
also means that any visiting student to NYUAD would have more rights and
freedoms than native and long-time residents of the emirate.

This contradiction was highlighted in April 2011 when several pro-democracy
advocates (Emirati citizens) were arrested and detained without charges.
That one of them, Nasser bin Ghaith, was also a professor at the Sorbonne
branch in Abu Dhabi compounded the problem.

We urged the NYU administration to speak out against the arrests, arguing
that it was important to defend the freedoms of faculty of whatever
nationality who teach at American and European universities in the UAE.
Silence on this serious issue would set a precedent that could also have
ominous consequences for the speech protections of NYUAD faculty.

As the foreign university with the largest and most visible presence in the
UAE, the NYU administration, our view, was beholden to give public
expression to the principle of defending academic freedoms. At the time of
writing, the administration is declining to do so.

This kind of quandary is hardly unique to NYUAD. It rears its head wherever
and whenever US universities decide to operate in a full-service capacity in
a closed society. Until recently, the larger instances of overseas
involvement in illiberal states have been limited to specific programmes,
and in disciplines - such as engineering, business and medicine - that do
not usually attract speech controversies.

Exporting the liberal arts model carries with it certain contradictions. The
host authorities will be able to showcase their tolerance of a liberal arts
institution, but only at the risk of highlighting the disparity between the
freedoms denied to their own citizens and those extended to the foreign
academics in their midst. In the case of NYUAD, the confusion over the
cultural zone highlighted just how jittery the Abu Dhabi authorities were
about extending protections that lie at the heart of the academic
enterprise.

It is no less instructive that the NYU administration and the United Arab
Emirates were still haggling over the alternative arrangements for the
'roaming protocols' after US faculty members arrived. Firm agreements should
have been reached on academic freedom protections before any contracts were
drawn up.

So far, at least, the NYUAD experience demonstrates some of the perils
intrinsic to fast-track investments in locations that require close
cooperation with, and funding from, authoritarian governments. In such
circumstances, universities are not at all like corporations bent on
repatriating profits as quickly as possible.

Operating an overseas branch with a full umbrella of speech protections will
almost certainly result in ongoing tensions, if not overt conflicts, with
the sovereign authority of the host nation. Rather than hope for the best,
it should be assumed that the outcome is likely to heighten the risks for
faculty members and students.

Nor should anyone expect smooth sailing when trying to protect the rights of
campus workers. But the standards for upholding these protections, just as
those governing academic staff and students, should be high. The freedom
enjoyed by academics needs to be used to advocate for the rights and
freedoms of non-professionals who labour to build our workplaces or who
labour alongside us in these buildings.
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