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Jon Baldwin – Chief HE Adviser 
Tribal Group plc 
9th Annual Governance and 
Regulations Forum 
16th/17th September, Melbourne
• The importance of the Corporate Governance of the 
University. 
• Discussion of the effective leadership and management of 
complexity suggesting that regulation might, on occasion, 
be an opportunity rather than a threat. 
2
How is governance defined? 
• Definition 1. “university governance is defined as the constitutional forms 
and processes through which universities govern their affairs” 
• Definition 2. “The essence of good governance in the modern age is that 
it delivers strategic decisions quickly and effectively with a maximum 
degree of participation by the university community.” Shattock 2006 
3
Traditional international models 
• The European model 
The state> the rector> the (academic) senate> the faculties and 
departments 
• The UK/Commonwealth model 
The (majority lay) Council><(the vice-chancellor as chief academic and 
administrative officer)><the (academic) senate> the faculties> the 
departments 
• The US model 
The (entirely lay) Board of Regents/Trustees> 
the president>the deans >the graduate school, the undergraduate 
college> the departments 
4
Changes to the traditional models of 
university governance 1. 
• State management to state steering—greater autonomy 
• Increasing role of lay governing bodies and their chairs 
• Accountability 
• Strategy 
• Top Salaries 
• Performance targets 
• Demand for smaller decision-making bodies 
• Changing role of rector/vc from academic leader to chief executive 
5
Changes to the traditional models of 
university governance 2. 
• Rise of the ‘strengthened steering core’ (Clark 1998) the SMT/ 
Executive Committee 
• Decline of the senate/academic board 
• Devolution to executive deans/PVCs 
• Re engineering academic structures—merged faculties/colleges, 
departments into multi-disciplinary schools 
6
What pressures are these changes a 
response to? 
• Increasing size and consequential financial complexity of universities 
• Accountability and state steering 
• Financial stringency 
• Competition and marketisation 
• League tables 
7
What questions do these changes raise? 
• Efficiency or effectiveness—the evidence of institutional performance 
• What is the core business? How should it be reflected in governance 
processes? 
• Controlling the executive 
• The executive committee or the SMT? 
• The role of deans—an executive arm or a channel of 
communication? 
• The administration—a chief operating officer or a disaggregated set 
of services? 
• The concept of ‘shared governance’ 
8
What is ‘shared governance’? 
• Means different things to different people – often invoked but much 
misunderstood 
• Olsen, “Exactly what is shared governance”, The Chronicle of 
Higher Education”, July 29, 2009: 
 Committee agreement then implementation? 
 Professors delegate governance to administrators (“to spare 
themselves from the more distasteful managerial labour”)? 
 Administration v academy? 
 ALL WRONG!! 
9
What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? 
• Shared governance is a consultative approach to decision making 
where those involved in consultations are those who have the 
relevant expertise to make an informed contribution 
 No one person is arbitrarily making important decisions absent 
the advice of key constituents; 
 Certain constituencies are given primary responsibility over 
decision making in certain areas 
• However, final institutional authority resides ultimately in the 
governing board, which entrusts day-to-day administration to the 
Vice Chancellor (or equivalent) 
10
What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? 
• Shared governance is a legitimising process; but one which must 
not be confused with need to have a strong centre of authority in the 
university 
 It is not a synonym either for decentralisation or weak decision 
making structures 
 Neither is it a synonym for endless and equal conversation – 
some voices will have more weight than others 
• “Genuine shared governance gives voice (but not necessarily 
ultimate authority) to concerns common to all constituencies as well 
as to issues unique to specific groups” (Olsen) 
11
What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? 
• Shared governance attempts to balance maximum participation in 
decision making with clear accountability 
 A Vice Chancellor must protect core values (i.e. of the academy) 
but also ensure accountability 
 It is a “delicate balance between faculty and staff participation in 
planning and decision making processes, on the one hand, and 
administrative accountability on the other”. (Olsen) 
12
Nature of universities 
• Conservative / radical 
• Critical / supportive 
• Competitive / collegial 
• Autonomous / accountable 
• Private / public 
• Excellent / equal 
• Entrepreneurial / caring 
• Certain / provisional 
• Traditional / innovative 
• Ceremonial / iconoclastic 
• Local / international 
• Collegiums / corporations 
• Static / strategic 
Values and the University, Professor Sir David Watson, Institute of Education, University of London, 2006 
13
Defend what we do against governments and other external interests with vigour and courage ; 
Don’t change for the sake of being seen to do something and don’t confuse change with progress ; 
Accept that the university is a community made up of all those who serve it, not your plaything; nobody can be 
sacrificed in your name ; 
Stay involved, but don’t interfere ; 
Trust academics to do good work ; 
Favour principles, not rules but follow the rules you have and stop letting power win over truth and reason ; 
Remember that culture trumps system ; 
Stop thinking and speaking in the terms given by the deadly triumvirate : pseudo-intellectuals, neo-liberals and 
technofuturists ; 
Never again use the word strategy: with whom are you at war ? 
Stop calling people colleagues until you’ve learned to mean it. 
Academics anonymous : an open letter to university “leaders” – The Guardian, 08/08/14. 
14
“Managers are not malicious. We are not stupid. We are 
misunderstood. Before I became a manager I thought I knew why: it is 
fiendishly difficult for a manager to write a message that cannot be 
read as some kind of cynical attempt to undermine academic values. 
Well-meaning but badly-expressed messages are seen as sinister, or 
stupid. 
After a decade in management, I realise that I was wrong. It’s not 
fiendishly difficult. It’s impossible. Someone who feels threatened – 
whether or not the feeling is justified – makes what I call an 
assumption of unreasonableness. They assume that the message is a 
threat and find evidence to support that assumption “ 
Andrew Derrington, executive pro vice- chancellor of humanities and 
social sciences, University of Liverpool. 30/04/13. 
15
16 
So, key messages : 
The Corporate University must be respected and 
acknowledged ; 
A shared governance framework creates positive 
conditions ; 
There is often a gap between the (so called) centre and 
the academic community ; 
An appropriate regulatory touch can assist in the 
closing of that gap.
“The fear of making serious decisions is a 
new kind of fear called decidophobia” 
Walter Kaufmann, Philosopher, Princeton 
17

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"Why effective corporate governance is essential in your university" Jon Baldwin at the Annual Governance and Regulations Forum Melbourne September 2014

  • 1. Jon Baldwin – Chief HE Adviser Tribal Group plc 9th Annual Governance and Regulations Forum 16th/17th September, Melbourne
  • 2. • The importance of the Corporate Governance of the University. • Discussion of the effective leadership and management of complexity suggesting that regulation might, on occasion, be an opportunity rather than a threat. 2
  • 3. How is governance defined? • Definition 1. “university governance is defined as the constitutional forms and processes through which universities govern their affairs” • Definition 2. “The essence of good governance in the modern age is that it delivers strategic decisions quickly and effectively with a maximum degree of participation by the university community.” Shattock 2006 3
  • 4. Traditional international models • The European model The state> the rector> the (academic) senate> the faculties and departments • The UK/Commonwealth model The (majority lay) Council><(the vice-chancellor as chief academic and administrative officer)><the (academic) senate> the faculties> the departments • The US model The (entirely lay) Board of Regents/Trustees> the president>the deans >the graduate school, the undergraduate college> the departments 4
  • 5. Changes to the traditional models of university governance 1. • State management to state steering—greater autonomy • Increasing role of lay governing bodies and their chairs • Accountability • Strategy • Top Salaries • Performance targets • Demand for smaller decision-making bodies • Changing role of rector/vc from academic leader to chief executive 5
  • 6. Changes to the traditional models of university governance 2. • Rise of the ‘strengthened steering core’ (Clark 1998) the SMT/ Executive Committee • Decline of the senate/academic board • Devolution to executive deans/PVCs • Re engineering academic structures—merged faculties/colleges, departments into multi-disciplinary schools 6
  • 7. What pressures are these changes a response to? • Increasing size and consequential financial complexity of universities • Accountability and state steering • Financial stringency • Competition and marketisation • League tables 7
  • 8. What questions do these changes raise? • Efficiency or effectiveness—the evidence of institutional performance • What is the core business? How should it be reflected in governance processes? • Controlling the executive • The executive committee or the SMT? • The role of deans—an executive arm or a channel of communication? • The administration—a chief operating officer or a disaggregated set of services? • The concept of ‘shared governance’ 8
  • 9. What is ‘shared governance’? • Means different things to different people – often invoked but much misunderstood • Olsen, “Exactly what is shared governance”, The Chronicle of Higher Education”, July 29, 2009:  Committee agreement then implementation?  Professors delegate governance to administrators (“to spare themselves from the more distasteful managerial labour”)?  Administration v academy?  ALL WRONG!! 9
  • 10. What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? • Shared governance is a consultative approach to decision making where those involved in consultations are those who have the relevant expertise to make an informed contribution  No one person is arbitrarily making important decisions absent the advice of key constituents;  Certain constituencies are given primary responsibility over decision making in certain areas • However, final institutional authority resides ultimately in the governing board, which entrusts day-to-day administration to the Vice Chancellor (or equivalent) 10
  • 11. What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? • Shared governance is a legitimising process; but one which must not be confused with need to have a strong centre of authority in the university  It is not a synonym either for decentralisation or weak decision making structures  Neither is it a synonym for endless and equal conversation – some voices will have more weight than others • “Genuine shared governance gives voice (but not necessarily ultimate authority) to concerns common to all constituencies as well as to issues unique to specific groups” (Olsen) 11
  • 12. What is ‘shared governance’ (cntd)? • Shared governance attempts to balance maximum participation in decision making with clear accountability  A Vice Chancellor must protect core values (i.e. of the academy) but also ensure accountability  It is a “delicate balance between faculty and staff participation in planning and decision making processes, on the one hand, and administrative accountability on the other”. (Olsen) 12
  • 13. Nature of universities • Conservative / radical • Critical / supportive • Competitive / collegial • Autonomous / accountable • Private / public • Excellent / equal • Entrepreneurial / caring • Certain / provisional • Traditional / innovative • Ceremonial / iconoclastic • Local / international • Collegiums / corporations • Static / strategic Values and the University, Professor Sir David Watson, Institute of Education, University of London, 2006 13
  • 14. Defend what we do against governments and other external interests with vigour and courage ; Don’t change for the sake of being seen to do something and don’t confuse change with progress ; Accept that the university is a community made up of all those who serve it, not your plaything; nobody can be sacrificed in your name ; Stay involved, but don’t interfere ; Trust academics to do good work ; Favour principles, not rules but follow the rules you have and stop letting power win over truth and reason ; Remember that culture trumps system ; Stop thinking and speaking in the terms given by the deadly triumvirate : pseudo-intellectuals, neo-liberals and technofuturists ; Never again use the word strategy: with whom are you at war ? Stop calling people colleagues until you’ve learned to mean it. Academics anonymous : an open letter to university “leaders” – The Guardian, 08/08/14. 14
  • 15. “Managers are not malicious. We are not stupid. We are misunderstood. Before I became a manager I thought I knew why: it is fiendishly difficult for a manager to write a message that cannot be read as some kind of cynical attempt to undermine academic values. Well-meaning but badly-expressed messages are seen as sinister, or stupid. After a decade in management, I realise that I was wrong. It’s not fiendishly difficult. It’s impossible. Someone who feels threatened – whether or not the feeling is justified – makes what I call an assumption of unreasonableness. They assume that the message is a threat and find evidence to support that assumption “ Andrew Derrington, executive pro vice- chancellor of humanities and social sciences, University of Liverpool. 30/04/13. 15
  • 16. 16 So, key messages : The Corporate University must be respected and acknowledged ; A shared governance framework creates positive conditions ; There is often a gap between the (so called) centre and the academic community ; An appropriate regulatory touch can assist in the closing of that gap.
  • 17. “The fear of making serious decisions is a new kind of fear called decidophobia” Walter Kaufmann, Philosopher, Princeton 17

Editor's Notes

  1. Shared governance is a legitimising process; but one which must not be confused with need to have a strong centre of authority in the university It is not a synonym either for decentralisation or weak decision making structures Neither is it a synonym for endless and equal conversation – some voices will have more weight than others Genuine shared governance gives voice (but not necessarily ultimate authority) to concerns common to all constituencies as well as to issues unique to specific groups
  2. Shared governance attempts to balance maximum participation in decision making with clear accountability A Vice Chancellor must protect core values (i.e. of the academy) but also ensure accountability It is a “delicate balance between faculty and staff participation in planning and decision making processes, on the one hand, and administrative accountability on the other”. (Olsen)
  3. Conservative / radical Critical / supportive Competitive / collegial Autonomous / accountable Private / public Excellent / equal Entrepreneurial / caring Certain / provisional Traditional / innovative Ceremonial / iconoclastic Local / international Collegiums / corporations Static / strategic