Apter letter

From: emily apter
Sent: Thu 29/04/2010 02:51

Dear Vice-Chancellor Driscoll,

I am writing to express my support and admiration for the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University.  I have collaborated with many distinguished faculty in this programme on the English edition of the “Vocabulary of European Philosophy” (published in French in 2004) and have had the pleasure of inviting several of them to NYU as featured speakers in our “New French Philosophy” lecture series.

I urge you, along with all my colleagues in Comparative Literature and French at NYU, to  reconsider shutting down this much esteemed department.  Our transatlantic ties with British philosophy and continental thought will be infinitely the poorer if this closure stands.

Sincerely and Respectfully Yours,

Emily Apter
Professor of French, English and Comparative Literature
New York University

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Ansell-Pearson, Beistegui, Houlgate letter

Professor Michael Driscoll
Vice-Chancellor
Middlesex University

Dear Professor Driscoll

copied to:  Professors Ahmad, House, and Esche

We write to express our dismay at the decision to close down the Philosophy programmes at Middlesex and to urge the University to reconsider its decision.  Philosophy at Middlesex makes a unique contribution to the discipline and its teaching and research are renowned nationally and internationally for excellence. It has several world-class-researchers among its members, each one of which enjoys an international reputation.  Some of the most important work in European philosophy in the past decade has emanated from Middlesex, being both bold and original as well as meeting the highest standards of scholarly excellence.  This work enhances not only the profile of European philosophy nationally and internationally, but also the standing of the University itself.  The Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy is one of the most innovative of its kind and it is by far the leading centre for the study of European philosophy in London and its environs.  It produces top quality graduates and regularly hosts conferences and workshops of national and international significance, making a unique and highly valued contribution to the intellectual and cultural life of the capital.  The Centre is a highly active one and run with a rare dedication and commitment to philosophical originality and radicality.  Its closure would be a tremendous loss, verging on a catastrophe, for the health of philosophy in this country.

We would be happy to visit the administration team at Middlesex to voice our concerns in person and make the case for the University continuing to support and invest in Philosophy.

yours sincerely

Keith Ansell-Pearson
Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick

Miguel Beistegui
Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick

Stephen Houlgate
Professor of Philosophy, University of Warwick

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Alizadeh letter

29 April 2010

To Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Enterprise of Middlesex University

Dear Waqar Ahmad,

I am writing to ask you to review your decision regarding the closure of the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex University. As a PhD student in the CRMEP I have a first hand experience of its academic excellence which is without exaggeration unique in its field in the whole of the English-speaking world. Through my attendance in many national and international conferences, I can testify to the amazing respect that many world-famous academics, not only in philosophy but also in Humanities in general, feel towards the CRMEP. Your decision will not only damage the filed of the European philosophy in the UK but also will damage the reputation of the Middlesex university which is first and foremost known for its philosophy department in many countries, including my country of origin Iran. The work done by the CRMEP in promoting the name of Middlesex university is much more effective than many of your advertising campaigns overseas which cost the university thousands of pounds. Even if such a decision could be justified on sole ground of financial calculations, I strongly believe it would not be a correct decision.
The growing discontent among the broader academic community in the UK over the past few hours, since the announcement of this terrible news, makes me wonder whether I can proudly call myself a Middlesex alumni in the future.

Regards,

Ali Alizadeh

PhD student, Middlesex University

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Get involved in the campaign to stop the cuts

Around 100 people came to our first campaign meeting on Friday afternoon at Trent Park. We heard about the background to the decision to shut philosophy at Middlesex – and the threadbare nature of the management case for this decision.

Similar cuts programmes at other universities have been put on hold or halted by mounting high profile protest campaigns involving staff, students and the wider public.

We agreed to set up a Save Middlesex Philosophy campaign to demand that the university management reverses its disastrous decision to shut down philosophy. There are two upcoming dates for the campaign:

Tuesday 4 May: Students (undergrad and postgrad) will be gathering outside the Mansion Building in Trent Park at 9:30am for a meeting with deputy vice chancellor Margaret House and dean of arts Ed Esche at 10:30am. We want to make clear our opposition to their decision.

Wednesday 5 May: We will be petitioning and leafleting Middlesex students as they hand in their coursework essays at Hendon campus. This is an ideal opportunity to raise awareness of what is going on in philosophy and to build support for our campaign. Meet 9:30am at Hendon Central tube station.

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Write to protest against the closure decision

If you want to help stop the closure of philosophy at Middlesex, there are two simple actions you can do right away. The first is to sign the online petition protesting against the closure decision. We’ve had over 8,000 signatures already!

The second is to write to people responsible for the decision to tell them how you feel. Please send a brief email or letter to the following four people. Feel free to extract some points from the petition text. And if you’re happy for you letter to be posted in part or full on this blog, then BCC it to us at savemdxphil@gmail.com

The people to email are:

Michael Driscoll, vice-chancellor of the university – m.driscoll@mdx.ac.uk
Waqar Ahmad, deputy vice-chancellor, research and enterprise – w.ahmad@mdx.ac.uk
Margaret House, deputy vice-chancellor, academic – m.house@mdx.ac.uk
Ed Esche, dean of the School of Arts & Education – e.esche@mdx.ac.uk

You can just copy and paste this list into your email program:

m.driscoll@mdx.ac.uk; w.ahmad@mdx.ac.uk; m.house@mdx.ac.uk; e.esche@mdx.ac.uk

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FAQ on the financial situation of Philosophy at Middlesex

How could Philosophy at Middlesex be financially sustainable with an annual average of only 12 undergraduate students over the last 3 years?

This figure refers to single honours BA students only. It is not the number of undergraduate students taking Philosophy modules – there are also students from other disciplines – and we have postgraduate programmes. According to the School of Arts & Education, by its ‘credit count’ method, the ‘full-time equivalent’ number of students taught in Philosophy this year (2009-10) is 112.

But is even this number enough to sustain a research-active Philosophy group?

There are currently only four academic members of staff in Philosophy whose salaries are paid out of the ‘core’ budget of the School of Arts & Education. The fees income is more than sufficient for that. Two other Philosophy staff (one on a temporary contract) are on the Philosophy Research budget (what is called ‘QR’).

But is that large enough?

The annual income from the Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) received by the university for Philosophy for 2009-10 was £173, 260. The cost of the two staff on the Philosophy research budget (including what they call the ‘on costs’ of national insurance and pension contributions) is less than half that figure.

Are these the only sources of income in Philosophy?

No. Philosophy also makes applications for external research funding: a single AHRC grant awarded for 2006-09 was for the sum of £230,000. Another large research project grant application was submitted recently. The Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex has also hosted two Leverhulme Research Fellowships in the last six years.

Don’t subjects also have to make an additional contribution to university costs?

Yes. In addition to its contribution to the management and administrative costs of its school, a subject group at Middlesex University is expected to make a ‘contribution’ to the ‘centre’. This currently stands at a minimum requirement of 55%. It is not possible to say how – if at all – the overall sum relates to the university’s actual central expenditure on facilities for teaching and research.

As it stands (by what they call ‘the credit count’ method of calculation), the Philosophy & Religious Studies subject group makes a 53% ‘contribution’. Using the figures projected for recruitment by the university admissions, on the basis of applications received (with Philosophy undergraduate applications up 118% for 2010-11), if programmes had remained open, the contribution from Philosophy & Religious Studies would have risen to 59% for 2010-11.

So Philosophy & Religious Studies met the university’s financial sustainability criterion for next academic year.

Yes.


So if it’s not about the sustainability of the Philosophy & Religious Studies subject group – on the university’s own financial criteria – why are the Philosophy programmes all being closed?

Good question. The Middlesex University press statement claims that “the university follows rigorous criteria to assess the sustainability of its courses” – although it is careful not to claim that the decision to close Philosophy was the result of the application of these criteria.

In fact, during March and April, staff were given a series of constantly changing criteria by the university management in the process leading up to the confirmation of the decision. The apparently crucial one emerged only after the decision for closure had already been made.

What was the justification cited?

The reason cited is primarily financial – but it is not a question of the financial sustainability of the subject area, as usually understood. Rather, it is about the additional income that the university will receive from the government if it shifts to teaching more students in other kinds of subject.

The dean of Arts & Education told Philosophy staff on 26 April that the university will generate more revenue if it shifts its resources to other kind of subjects – from what is called ‘Band D’ to ‘Bands B and C’ students.

What is this classification of students on a scale of A to D?

The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) funds universities for students at four different levels depending on the subject studied by the student. ‘Band A’ students (eg clinical medicine) receive the most funds, ‘Band D’ students (classroom based activities), receive the least.

Bands B and C involve various sorts of laboratory or workshop/studio based activities. The move from D to C is one towards what are often thought of as more ‘vocational’ subjects, involving a greater degree of ‘training’.

So it is about stopping teaching non-vocational arts and humanities subjects?

Yes.

Presumably, this financial logic applies across the whole sector. Given the cap on student numbers and universities’ needs to generate more income, non-vocational arts and humanities subjects could be closed down all over the place?

Yes. But there are two other things to bear in mind here. First, Band B and C students are funded at a higher level because they are supposed to require a higher level of spending on their education.

Switching bands should therefore not generate any spare income. If it does, it will be because these students are not receiving the facilities for which they are being funded by the government. The rationale for the switch thus indicates that this is bad news for these other kinds of student.

Second, there is always more than one strategic option open to a university faced with a particular set of constraints. Middlesex University has declared the decision to close Philosophy ‘unavoidable’. It involves it giving up its previous research policy of ‘supporting excellence in research’ and thereby effectively giving up on ‘academic reputation’ as a significant factor in its market position.

Yet some other universities in a similar situation are taking the opposite course of action – intensifying their focus on research excellence and emphasising the integration of research into teaching – in order to build ‘reputation’. Some are also emphasising the practical need for an element of humanities or ‘liberal arts’ teaching across the whole range of subject provision.

A radical shrinkage in non-vocational arts and humanities subjects is therefore certainly not ‘unavoidable’. However, given the narrowly corporate management culture sweeping through UK universities, it is a clear and present danger.


Are any other factors involved?

Yes. The above concerns only the justification given by the dean to Philosophy staff. There are more immediate financial reasons – to do with the group’s success in generating income – connected with the ‘financialisation’ of the economics of universities and the search for short-term financial gains. These relate to broader changes in the character of universities, and of Middlesex University in particular.

What are these factors?

They concern income derived from sources other than teaching. As part of its sustainability strategy, Philosophy & Religious Studies has multiple sources of income. Two of these – research income from RAE 2008 and income from what they call ‘collaborative programmes’ with religious colleges (essentially accrediting and validating programmes in other institutions) – are independent of the employment of staff who teach and research.

Surely you need academic staff in a subject to receive research income for it from RAE 2008?!

One would think so. However, the RAE rewards past performance going forward and, we are told, universities have complete strategic freedom to redeploy the money internally. It seems that RAE 2008 monies will come to the university until August 2014, whether or not the university continues to employ academic staff in the subject that earned them.

Indeed, if as many believe, the incoming government delays the next exercise by 2 years, to 2015, Middlesex will continue to receive RAE money for Philosophy for six more years, until August 2016, whether it employs any philosophers or not. The total sum is likely to be close to £1 million.

Wow! So it was its very success that made Philosophy vulnerable?

In part, yes – if a university administration is prepared to asset-strip its own institution for short-term gain.

What will HEFCE think of this?

We don’t know. A journalist should ask them.

It’s probably not what they had in mind when they gave universities free rein for the strategic redeployment of RAE monies. Their policy suggests they expect universities to use their income primarily to sustain ‘research excellence’, but they do also encourage them towards certain areas, the ‘STEM’ subjects: Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics. These two things are increasingly coming into conflict with each other.

How do they encourage universities to shift resources towards the STEM subjects in research?

By giving different subjects different allocations per capita of academic staff for the same ratings. Humanities subjects get far less than other areas. The RAE allocation for Philosophy, nationally, per capita, dropped significantly between RAE 2001 and RAE 2008.

On the other hand, the RAE increasing rewards success at the highest end of the scale over the middle of the scale, in all subjects, and Philosophy is the highest research-rated subject in the university.

So even if the university were to reinvest this money in research in other areas (which is by no means certain) – at the cost of having significantly reduced the university’s educational and research portfolio, and denied a distinctive educational opportunity to hundreds of students, many with ‘non-traditional’ backgrounds for postgraduate work in Philosophy – they would be far from guaranteed an equivalent return. But this is the kind of thing universities are increasingly prepared to do to please their political masters in the struggle for funding.

How is this connected to the ‘financialisation’ of economics of universities?

Universities in Britain now believe they can, and should, set up and close down production in areas of university teaching and research in exactly the same way as with any other kind of commodity, in response to short-term changes in HEFCE’s funding policies. They have accepted HEFCE’s use of crude financial instruments to carry out the government’s ‘skills and training’ oriented policy objectives for the universities.

What is at stake here, ultimately?

The very concept of education.

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Nina Power’s Guardian article opposing the closure

Dr Nina Power, a senior lecturer in philosophy at Roehampton University, received her PhD from Middlesex’s threatened philosophy department. She has written an article for the Guardian’s Comment is Free site on why we must oppose plans to shut down philosophy at Middlesex:

The closure of philosophy at Middlesex will send a terrible message: that philosophy doesn’t belong in ex-polytechnics, even when they achieve better results than elite institutions. It implies that philosophy isn’t for “non-traditional” students (much of Middlesex’s intake comes from lower-income and mature students, who juggle work and families in order to attend). It reflects incredibly badly on the management of Middlesex that it would destroy the long-term achievements and potential of its philosophy department in the name of spurious short-term considerations. To close philosophy there would be to fall in line with the increasingly prevalent, but disastrous view, that newer universities should be little more than holding pens for students channelled away from the study of serious subjects.

Interest in philosophy has in fact grown massively in recent years. This is, in part, due to the increased numbers of students taking A-level philosophy, but is also the result of the widespread desire for critical thought and analysis in the face of an increasingly disorienting world. Closure at Middlesex would be a step back to the bad old days when philosophy meant a few young, white and almost entirely male students at privileged institutions discussing the finer points of formal logic over sherry. Middlesex University must be prevented from dismantling one of the finest philosophy departments in the country: fight to keep philosophy alive.

Read the whole article here – and check out more news and links about the campaign to save Middlesex philosophy on her blog.

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Reactions from the New Statesman and Leiter Reports

Here’s Simon Reid-Henry in the New Statesman on why the attack on Middlesex philosophy is part of a wider assault on the humanities:

The philosophy department at Middlesex is a case in point. This is one of the leading lights of continental philosophy in this country, with an international reputation for furthering our understanding of the classics of European thought – be it Kant or Hegel, Sartre or Badiou – alongside a concern to re-appraise those works in light of present day political and ethical dilemmas.

It is, moreover, the highest Research Assessment Exercise-rated subject at Middlesex. Which means that even by the increasingly ridiculous standards used to measure and to monitor academic work in this country, the department is about as “relevant” as you could want philosophy to be. And as a former polytechnic that was holding its own alongside the Russell group of top twenty universities, one wonders quite what else such a department might have been expected to do.

Read the whole thing here.

Brian Leiter’s influential US-based philosophy news site has also reported the news – check out the comments thread for more astonished and outraged reactions.

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Petition to save Middlesex philosophy

Please take a moment to read this petition to save Middlesex’s philosophy department. You can sign it online at the GoPetition site.

The abrupt closure of the Philosophy programmes at Middlesex University is a matter of national and indeed international concern. Not only does it flatly contradict the stated commitment of Middlesex University to promote ‘research excellence’, it represents a startling stage in the ongoing impoverishment of Philosophy provision in the UK.

The Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy at Middlesex makes a significant and distinctive contribution to the teaching of philosophy in the UK. Its set of MA programmes is currently the largest in the UK, and Philosophy is the most prestigious and highest research-rated subject at Middlesex University.

The CRMEP is now widely recognised as one of the most important centres for the study of modern European philosophy anywhere in the English-speaking world. Building on its grade of 5 in the 2001 Research Assessment Exercise, in the 2008 RAE Middlesex was rated first in philosophy among post-1992 universities, with 65% of its research activity judged “world-leading” or “internationally excellent”.

More importantly, work carried out at the CRMEP is characterised by a unique emphasis on broad cultural, artistic and intellectual contexts, and a marked sense of social and political engagement.

Middlesex Philosophy is one of only a handful of programmes left in the UK that provides both research-driven and inclusive post-graduate teaching aimed at a wide range of students, specialist and non-specialist. It also happens to generate a substantial amount of revenue for the University, currently contributing close to half of its total income to the University’s central administration.

Middlesex University has decided to close its CRMEP in the complete absence of any persuasive academic or economic rationale. We call on Middlesex University to reverse this damaging and ill-judged decision to close its Philosophy programmes, and to renew its commitment to widening participation in education and to excellence in research.

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Middlesex University announces the closure of its top-rated department: Philosophy

Late on Monday 26 April, the Dean of the School of Arts & Humanities, Ed Esche, informed staff in Philosophy that the University executive had “accepted his recommendation” to close all Philosophy programmes: undergraduate, postgraduate and MPhil/PhD.

Philosophy is the highest research-rated subject in the University. Building on its grade 5 rating in RAE 2001, it was awarded a score of 2.8 on the new RAE scale in 2008, with 65% of its research activity judged “world-leading” or “internationally excellent”. It is now widely recognised as one of the most important centres for the study of modern European philosophy anywhere in the English-speaking world.

The MA programmes in Philosophy at Middlesex have grown in recent years to become the largest in the UK, with 42 new students admitted in September 2009.

The Dean explained that the decision to terminate recruitment and close the programmes was “simply financial”, and based on the fact that the University believes that it may be able to generate more revenue if it shifts its resources to other subjects – from “Band D” to “Band C” students.

The University currently expects each academic unit to contribute 55% of its gross income to the central administration. As it stands (by the credit count method of calculation), Philosophy and Religious Studies contributes 53%, after the deduction of School admin costs. According to the figures for projected recruitment from admissions (with Philosophy undergraduate applications up 118% for 2010-11), if programmes had remained open, the contribution from Philosophy and Religious Studies would have risen to 59% (with Philosophy’s contribution, considered on its own, at 53%).

In a meeting with Philosophy staff, the Dean acknowledged the excellent research reputation of Philosophy at Middlesex, but said that it made no “measurable” contribution to the University.

Needless to say, we very much regret this decision to terminate Philosophy, and its likely consequences for the School and our University and for the teaching of our subject in the UK.

Professor Peter Osborne
Director, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy

Professor Peter Hallward
Programme Leader for the MA programmes in Philosophy,

Dr Stella Sandford
Director of Programmes, Philosophy and Religious Studies.
Professor Éric Alliez

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