https://www.chronicle.com/article/acquiescent-no-more

Acquiescent No More
Tenured and tenure-track professors are finally fighting back.

Too often, complacency is the assumed natural state of the tenured professor. 
Solidarity, on the other hand, is an elusive and foreign concept. Even before 
higher education was plunged into a full-blown public health and economic 
crisis, the “widespread inaction” of tenured faculty has been, for some, an 
embarrassing and persistent reality. Even as universities risked becoming 
pared-down sites of work-force preparedness, resting on exploited, contingent 
academic labor and funded by exorbitant costs pushed onto students, many in the 
secure professoriate sat idly on the sidelines. Entrenched acquiescence, 
coupled with a lack of institutionalized bargaining rights, has helped to 
normalize a lack of direct political engagement from the most comfortable and 
well-protected academic workers.

As opportunities to land a tenure-track job have evaporated, those who have 
risen to the few remaining secure positions in the profession have by and large 
refused to use their professional privileges to speak out, whether on behalf of 
their contingent colleagues or to push for broader investment in public higher 
education, accepting instead that “the system is horrible, unethical, but it 
works for them.” While some tenured professors simply feel too overworked to 
participate in political activities, labor struggles, etc., others don’t see 
any reason why they should in the first place, choosing to identify “as 
thinkers rather than as workers.” But, as Jennifer Fredette forcefully argues 
in a group faculty interview for TheChronicle Review, “To have tenure and to 
stay in your lane is to be complicit with the injustices of the system in which 
you have secured this privilege.” While addressing the need to defend the most 
precarious workers on campuses, Naomi Klein put it even more succinctly: “Got 
your tenure? Make some trouble!”

In 1914, Guido Marx, a Stanford professor of engineering (and my great 
grandfather), was engaged in discussions at the founding of the American 
Association of University Professors regarding which faculty members should be 
included in the association. In a letter to the inimitable John Dewey, who 
would serve as founding president of the AAUP, Marx wrote, “We will get nowhere 
without a wholesome group consciousness. Our worst troubles as a profession 
arise from unwarranted assumptions of superiority on the one hand coupled with 
a too ready acquiescence on the other.” Over a century later, this “too ready 
acquiescence” has imperiled fundamental necessities of the profession and of 
the university itself, from faculty governance to secure employment and 
academic freedom. However, while many tenure-track faculty remained comfortably 
complacent in the face of the rise of contingency, the corporatization of their 
universities, and the hollowing out of any semblance of shared governance, the 
existential crises of 2020 may have finally pushed them to get off the 
sidelines.

Genuine change becomes possible when people get engaged and realize it is 
within their collective power to make it.
Draconian cuts, disproportionately hitting the most vulnerable in campus 
communities, coupled with unsafe plans for a return to face-to-face instruction 
have moved faculty, especially tenured and tenure-track faculty, from 
acquiescence to action. Moreover, amid widespread protests against 
institutional racism and police brutality, more faculty are joining efforts to 
resist slashing cuts affecting campus workers of color, and the abandonment of 
diversity efforts and ethnic-studies programs. But such a political awakening 
is inevitably accompanied by the realization that faculty who are not unionized 
and are unaccustomed to acting collectively in their own interest, let alone in 
the interest of the less powerful in their institutions, have a lot of ground 
to cover and plenty of professional and legal obstacles to overcome if they 
want to get organized and mobilize their collective power.

The sad fact of the matter is that relatively few faculty have formal 
collective-bargaining rights. At private colleges, the Supreme Court’s Yeshiva 
decision of 1980 designated faculty members part of management, and therefore 
ineligible for protection under the National Labor Relations Act. However, the 
persistent problem of a professional culture of faculty acquiescence, as Guido 
Marx’s words demonstrate, long predated the legal denial of the faculty’s 
collective-bargaining rights. For tenured and tenure-track professors looking 
to engage in political struggle, overcoming these institutional and cultural 
barriers can feel like fighting with both hands tied behind one’s back. But it 
shouldn’t. Along with countless existing organizations and campaigns that 
faculty can join, learn from, and help with, there are many stirring historical 
examples of workers without bargaining rights taking action, from Columbia 
graduate workers to West Virginia teachers. While some might think of 
collective bargaining as the highly ritualized and regulated process of 
employers and unions sitting across the table from each other, negotiating over 
a narrow set of legally constrained issues, academic workers are demonstrating 
that collective bargaining is much more than this. When employees organize, 
take action, and win changes in their working conditions, they, too, are 
bargaining collectively.

While some faculty at public colleges can enforce their right to union 
representation under state law, most tenure-track faculty lack formal 
collective-bargaining rights. Private colleges are under no obligation to 
recognize unions of tenure-track faculty (although they must recognize and 
bargain with unions of non-tenure-track and adjunct faculty, should a majority 
of them choose to organize). Faculty and staff at public colleges cannot 
enforce a demand for union representation in states where they lack explicit 
collective-bargaining rights; or rather, their ability to enforce such a demand 
depends on their ability to build power and act collectively, not on the appeal 
to the state bureaucracy.

Private colleges can choose on their own to bargain with faculty unions, but 
they have no legal obligation to do so. Indeed, a few private institutions have 
longstanding faculty unions, such as Pratt Institute and Adelphi University. 
Elsewhere, campus AAUP chapters make collective demands and act in concert, 
essentially ignoring the fact that they are not formally recognized as 
bargaining agents. The newly resurgent AAUP Chapter at Middlebury College, for 
example, is demanding collective bargaining for both faculty and staff.

Faculty organizing for a people-first approach to the current fiscal crisis — 
and for a cautious, safer approach to campus reopening — are building power and 
bargaining with their administrations on numerous campuses, often outside the 
confines of a formal collective-bargaining process. Still, whether they are 
putting together public presentations of university budgets (as faculty at the 
University of Arizona have done) or circulating petitions, they are acting 
collectively, and they are, in fact, bargaining — that’s what matters. 

While unionized faculty are busy negotiating with their employers over cuts, 
furloughs, layoffs and safe reopening, and organizing to build power beyond the 
bargaining table, non-unionized faculty are also on the march. The AAUP reports 
more than two dozen campuses where chapters have recently been chartered or 
have applications in process. The AAUP itself functions as both a union and a 
professional association, and is a valuable umbrella organization for faculty 
organizing across a range of issues, from concerns about work safety and 
intellectual property to privatization and the repercussions of a widespread 
pivot to remote instruction. As more faculty have become sharply aware of their 
vulnerability to top-down managerial decisions, turning to an AAUP chapter is 
frequently the first step toward making collective demands.

Even in states where public employees have no formal rights to collective 
representation, faculty are nonetheless acting collectively. At the University 
of North Carolina, hundreds of faculty publicly signed a petition demanding the 
right to opt out of in-person instruction in the fall. At Georgia Tech, faculty 
and other campus workers demanded that mask-wearing be made mandatory when the 
campus reopens. At the University of Arizona, where the university’s leadership 
announced a severe program of furloughs and salary cuts (even for employees who 
were already barely getting by), employees created a coalitionthat included 
faculty, staff, and students. The Coalition for Academic Justice at the 
University of Arizona (Cajua) embarked on a quick organizing drive, working 
across existing organizations and governance structures. Already Cajua has 
forced the university to delay the furlough program while the university’s 
leadership embarks on “meaningful and transparent discussions” about any cuts 
that may be needed to help the financial crisis. Under Arizona law, 
public-university employees have no legal collective-bargaining rights, and yet 
their organizing has given them the power to frustrate the unilateral decisions 
of university leadership and to carry out a progressive furlough plan that 
protects the most vulnerable members of the campus community.

Even the most privileged faculty are beginning to stand up, awakened to the 
fact that timid individual requests are unlikely to result in broad structural 
changes. Princeton faculty have developed an extensive list of demands to 
address anti-Black racism, and racism more broadly, within their university; 
the signatories include untenured faculty as well as numerous tenured 
professors with endowed chairs and international reputations. While their 
petition does not set forth actions that signatories might take if their 
demands are not met, it represents a first step in organizing — demonstrating 
that the university runs on the labor of its employees and that these employees 
will no longer acquiesce to the administration. Even the relatively modest step 
of signing a public letter can remind scholars of their ability to speak up, 
act collectively, and demand that their institutions make ethical decisions 
that serve all members of their communities. Start off small and build from 
there — active, sustained, increasing engagement is the key. Genuine change 
becomes possible when people get engaged and realize it is within their 
collective power to make it.

Collective action by faculty, pushed out of their acquiescence by stark budget 
cuts, threats to their health and safety, and a national reckoning with 
structural racism, is on the rise. Whether this action is sustained and whether 
it leads to unionizing or formal collective bargaining remains to be seen. 
There’s an old saying in union organizing: “The boss is the best organizer.” 
These faculty are getting organized in response to the callous decisions of 
their bosses. Even without officially sanctioned collective bargaining rights, 
faculty are finally adopting a “wholesome group consciousness” and moving from 
acquiescence to action, from complacency to collective organizing. They are 
asserting that, when it comes to universities, faculty are essential workers 
who can and will bargain collectively, with or without the support of the law.

[Rebecca Kolins Givan is an associate professor of Labor Studies and Employment 
Relations at Rutgers University, and the Vice-President of Rutgers AAUP-AFT, 
the union of full-time faculty and graduate workers.]

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.

View/Reply Online (#116): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/116
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/75908352/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES<br />#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when 
replying to a message.<br />#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; 
permanently archived.<br />#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a 
concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy  
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Reply via email to