榴莲视频

Turkey: powers for president on rector jobs ‘eradicate autonomy’

<榴莲视频 class="standfirst">Government decree on rector appointments comes under state of emergency after coup attempt
十一月 4, 2016
Poster of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Source: Getty

Turkey’s president has claimed greater powers over the appointment of university rectors, a move that in effect “eradicates university autonomy” and aims to suppress dissent, according to critics.

The Turkish government issued a decree on 29 October stating that rectors of public universities will now be appointed by the president, Recep Tayyip Erdo?an, from a list of three candidates nominated by the Council of Higher Education (Y?K).

The decree was issued under the nation’s state of emergency, in place since July’s attempted coup against Mr Erdo?an.

The president will be able to appoint a rector directly if he does not select one of the names on Y?K’s shortlist within a month and the body does not present a new candidate, according to reports.

Previously, rector candidates were ranked in order of preference in university staff votes, with names then passed to the president for approval via Y?K. In most cases, the choice of appointee was respected.

The president will also appoint private university heads from a list of three candidates nominated by the institution’s board of trustees and approved by Y?K.

Y?K, which describes itself as an autonomous institution, required all university deans to step down in July pending an investigation into supposed university infiltration by members of an “illegal organisation” blamed for the attempted coup.

The executive board of Turkey’s Science Academy, formed in 2011 as an independent academy, that the decree “is tantamount to the eradication of university autonomy to a large extent…University autonomy is not some abstract concept, but the sine qua non for the scientific and technological output of a country, its socio-economic development, and its ability to strengthen its democracy under the influence of new ideas.”

Academics at Istanbul’s Bo?azi?i University held a demonstration in protest against the decree.

Ay?e Bu?ra, professor in the Atatürk Institute for Modern Turkish History?at Bo?azi?i, read out a collective statement by academics at the protest.

Summarising the collective statement, Professor Bu?ra said:Although [the decree] is not related to the events that have led to the current state of emergency, it was introduced in the context of the legal setting of emergency measures without the approval of the parliament and without prior discussions involving representatives from the universities.”

Bo?azi?i staff elected a new rector on 12 July, with notification passed on to Mr Erdo?an.

“When the decree of October 29 passed, Bo?azi?i still did not have its president appointed and it is possible that the appointment will now be made according to the new decree,” Professor Bu?ra said, summarising the statement.

Sinan Ciddi, director of the Institute for Turkish Studies at Georgetown University, said the decreefundamentally, and quite possibly irreparably, curtails academic freedoms”.

Mr Erdo?an, who became prime minister in 2003, has “never felt comfortable with the notion of being criticised by any person or body, least of all the press and academia”, Dr Ciddi added.

He predicted that there would be “continued dismissals and/or detainment of scholars in the near future by new university administrations loyal to Erdo?an’s cause”, along with “more academics wanting to leave Turkey and find jobs overseas, where they can continue their work without fear of intimidation”.

Times Higher Education contacted Y?K, but it did not provide a comment in time for this article’s deadline.

john.morgan@tesglobal.com

请先注册再继续

为何要注册?

  • 注册是免费的,而且十分便捷
  • 注册成功后,您每月可免费阅读3篇文章
  • 订阅我们的邮件
注册
Please 登录 or 注册 to read this article.