Professors Worry Their Power Is Shrinking at Universities

Ilya Nemenman, an Emory University physics professor, seethed as summer break neared its end.After a pro-Palestinian demonstration in April had ended with police officers firing chemical irritants, Emory’s president had decided to update the campus’s protest policy.The revisions were not necessarily what angered Dr.

Nemenman.The problem was that the president had not received the University Senate’s approval first.“This is not just a corporation,” Dr.Nemenman chided the president, Gregory L.

Fenves, during an Aug.28 meeting, according to interviews and contemporaneous notes that summarized the discussion.

“It is also a community that does not operate top-down.”But Dr.Fenves’s repeated pledges to work with faculty did not reassure every professor.For more than a century, professors have regularly had vast influence over instruction, personnel and other hallmarks of campus life, sharing sway with presidents and trustees in decisions shaping many parts of campus life — an authority that is unfathomable in many workplaces.But this year has shown how fraught and fragile that practice, known as shared governance, has become at public and private universities alike.Arizona lawmakers sought to do away with legal guarantees of faculty power at public universities, their ambitions thwarted only by the governor’s veto.

At the University of Kentucky, trustees dissolved the University Senate and made professorial influence only advisory.Amid protests at Columbia University, the school’s then-president provoked fury when she defied a University Senate committee and called in the police.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

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Publisher: The New York Times

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