PoliticsWeb.gif

 

 

We Need More Jimmy Manyis

 

to Transform South African Universities

 

 

Dr Bonke Dumisa, Politicsweb, Johannesburg, 6 August 2014

 

It was a good thing that the "thick skinned firebrand" Jimmy Manyi and his
Progressive Professionals Forum decided to challenge Wits University, in
general, and its vice-chancellor Prof Adam Habib, in particular, on the
issue of transformation and racial imbalances. It is strange albeit not
surprising that Habib did not seem overly concerned that Wits is not
transforming under his leadership (see Citizen report
<http://citizen.co.za/222549/employment-equity-fundamental-challenge-wits/>
).

 

These are the troubling statistics that emerged from that encounter: of the
483 professors at Wits, only 158 are South Africans; and of these few South
African professors, only 28 of these are black. It would be far too
embarrassing to break these figures even further down to "How many of the
black South African professors are Black Africans?"

 

This is a very sensitive topic that most academics choose not to discuss in
public for the fear of internal victimization and also the fear of being
branded "xenophobic" or racist. It is precisely because of these
intimidation tactics that twenty years after the historic first democratic
vote in 1994 we still find such statistics in South Africa.

 

It is disappointing that Habib, who should know better as a former "academic
activist" at the former University of Durban Westville, does not see the
need for urgency in addressing the disturbing racial imbalances at his
university. He tried to defend himself by highlighting that Wits has
transformed significantly in terms of the demographic breakdown of its
students, while grudgingly conceding that they have not done anything much
to transform the Wits staff profile.  

Habib is quoted as saying "We need to strike a balance, however, between
advocating transformation and remaining competitive. We need to have a
balance between diversity and being cosmopolitan". Implied in Habib's
statement is that the appointment of and / or the promotion of black
professors negatively affects the competitiveness, hence the international
rankings, of universities.

 

Wits Is Just A Microcosm of What Is Wrong With The Lack of Transformation At
Most South African Universities

 

Before many of you, the readers of this article, start demonising comrade
Prof Adam Habib as "one of the many reactionary university
vice-chancellors"; I need to point out that Habib is purely a victim of what
is wrong with most South African universities' perception and understanding
of what their core mandate is. What is good about him is that he is open
minded about this issue and is willing to honestly engage on this matter;
whereas others choose to kill the messenger instead of addressing the
transformation issues being raised.

 

My comments on what Habib said or says will thus be purely done for
contextual purposes in order to highlight the lack of a meaningful
transformation agenda at most South African universities; and not in any way
meant to cast Habib, in his personal capacity, as a counter-revolutionary.

 

On the transformation of the student body

 

Habib is proud that Wits has significantly transformed its student body.
This process was engineered and achieved by his predecessors over the past
three decades; and he cannot take any personal credit for it. Wits has to be
applauded for having been in the forefront for admitting black students into
many academic programmes and degrees where there was a scarcity of black
graduates.

 

Wits is well-known for its production of good black law graduates, as well
as in other areas of expertise. We praise them for this. BUT, it must be
quickly pointed out that the serious pressure placed on South African
universities on the admission of black students has played more of a role in
transforming student body demographics at these universities than a
conscious moral-position being taken by their leadership.

 

It was disappointing that Habib was recently quoted in the mass media as
being uncomfortable with, or even being openly opposed to the setting of
"quotas" for black African students in their medical school. Habib knows
that there is a serious shortage of black African medical practitioners in
South Africa; and that black Africans have the lowest "1000 members of the
population: medical practitioner" statistics in the country; and that this
affects the provision of health services in most black areas.

 

The mere suggestion that Habib has some reservations about the existence of
these "black African quotas" indicates that he does not believe that Wits
has to progressively be part of solving South African problems despite the
vociferous agenda of the reactionary anti-transformation lobby.

 

One would have expected Wits to champion the opening of more areas where
there still exists a serious shortage of black professionals, instead of
encouraging resistance towards such transformation positions objectively
taken by past Wits leaders who one would presume were less progressive than
Habib.

 

Resisting the Transformation Agenda

 

I will never champion the appointment of and / or the promotion of
unqualified people to the position of professor. Hence, I fully agree with
Habib when he says "appointing unqualified people for the sake of
transformation would be mere window dressing that would lower the quality of
education for the very people who were denied it by the apartheid
government".

 

In fact, I even go further and unapologetically state that I have a serious
problem with the appointment of people without doctoral degrees to the
position of professor. Hence, I also fully agree with Jimmy Manyi that "It
will not help to have black professors if they have to 'mimic' their white
counterparts. We may as well have the white ones".

 

The problem with the non-appointment of black professors is that it has less
to do with the issue of academic qualifications; it is mostly to do with the
issue of the so-called "SAPSE-approved peer reviewed articles". People are
expected to publish whatever journal article in such journals; and the main
criteria for acceptance of articles in these journals is more about the
research techniques used than about the relevance of these articles in
addressing the real challenges of South Africa. Hence, it is much easier for
a non-South African to get appointed to the position of professor in South
Africa because there are more publishing opportunities outside South Africa
than there are in South Africa.

 

The irony about these universities who religiously pursue the "publish or
perish" agenda is that they do not actively put in place "grow your own
timber" research productivity goals, on how they will empower their own
staff in improving their own research capability. These universities would
rather quickly appoint a foreigner with many "international research
articles" without any relevance to South African economic development needs,
instead of appointing or promoting to professorship South Africans with
doctorates who are also part of the solution to many South African economic
development needs.

 

I would have expected Habib and Wits to spent more time explaining to us
what it is that they are specifically doing to "grow their own timber" in
improving their black staff's research productivity. Unfortunately, one of
the very first statements Habib made when he became the vice-chancellor at
Wits was to say he would be recruiting more international "A rated"
researchers in order to increase the research output at Wits, as a way of
improving their international rankings. Habib went to an extent he would be
prepared to pay "millions of rands" to each of these "A rated" researchers.
This is typical of the South African university way of thinking that the
focus of the university should be to "publish" and no focus whatsoever on
making the university more relevant and responsive to its immediate
surroundings.

 

Jimmy Manyi said that it was encouraging that the amendments to the
Employment Equity Act are "going to start biting"on those institutions who
are not transforming. Unfortunately, I do not share Jimmy Manyi's optimism
on this issue, because, as a former academic, I know how most South African
universities will simply continue "business as usual" by focusing on
"international rankings" and use the issue of "research productivity" as a
convenient excuse for justifying the non-appointment of black African
professors.

 

Is it not time we start putting under the microscope the relevance of most
of the research articles that have been used to keep black Africans from
professorships?

 

We all know the relevance of Prof Tim Noakes' research articles in
stimulating debates in the sports medicine field; many people have
personally benefitted from such information, not just in South Africa, but
all over the world. This is the relevant research productivity I am talking
about. But, I know for a fact that this is not what most South African panel
members have in mind when they decide whether a black African academic
deserves to be a professor or not.

 

I am happy that Prof Adam Habib will objectively respond to the issues I
raised here; and will not instead play the man instead of playing the ball.
That is why I wrote this article in order to encourage this debate raised by
Jimmy Manyi. Otherwise, the transformation situation is worse at most other
South African universities; BUT the leaders there would not openly debate
these issues as we saw in the engagement between Habib and Manyi.

 

A Serious Need to Check The Commitment to the Transformation Agenda by those
who want to lead South African universities

 

It is said the fish rots from the head. If the head of the university is not
personally committed to the national and institutional transformation
agenda, it is doubtful if the university headed by such a person can
genuinely transform other than by pure default. It is thus important that
those who want to become leaders of our South African universities should be
seriously put under the microscope if they are committed to genuine
transformation of our tertiary education sector.

 

The genuine transformation of South African universities can only be
achieved if the type of people who serve on South African university
councils are people who know what happens at the universities where they
serve on the council. The university cannot transform if the people who
serve on its council are themselves anti-transformation.

 

-   Dr Bonke Dumisa, formerly known as Prof Bonke Dumisa when he was still a
full-time academic, is an Advocate of the High Courts of South Africa and
Lesotho.

 

 

From:
http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=6
72101
<http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=
672101&sn=Detail&pid=71616> &sn=Detail&pid=71616

 

 

 

 

 

 

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