1 / 21

The eternal search for accountability & steering in Dutch humanities valorisation debates

The eternal search for accountability & steering in Dutch humanities valorisation debates. Paper presented to What is the arts & humanities research mission ? in “Towards transformative governance? Responses to mission-oriented paradigms”, EU-SPRI 2012 Conference, Karlsruhe, Germany.

june
Download Presentation

The eternal search for accountability & steering in Dutch humanities valorisation debates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The eternal search for accountability & steering in Dutch humanities valorisation debates Paper presentedtoWhat is the arts & humanities research mission? in “Towards transformative governance? Responses to mission-oriented paradigms”, EU-SPRI 2012 Conference, Karlsruhe, Germany. Paul Benneworth, CHEPS, University of Twente, the Netherlands

  2. The context: 3 related changes • Nature of society • Increasingimportance of knowledgeto welfare (Romer, Castells, Temple et al. ) • Nature of public administration • Shift towardsgovernance in networks (Rhodes, Kickert, Ferlie et al.) • Nature of research • Massification: fromboutiqueto ‘engine-room’ (Gibbons et al., Etzkowitz & Leyesdorff)

  3. The new university research environment • Massively increased research budgets • Shift in anatomy of research (scholarship  teams, researchers, infrastructure) • New expectations on research value • Making clear contributions to public goals • New accountability mechanisms • Shift from peer review  summary metrics and performance indicators

  4. . Linear research valorisation model

  5. From a real processtoanappealing macro-heuristic Outputs?

  6. Mobilising supporters to ‘idea’ • Politically popular – AUTM Better world report: ‘licensing will save us” • But a heuristic/ policy concept, not a theoretical concept • Theory selectively woven into politically desirable ambitions.

  7. Valorisation in Humanities • Research: nexus of research, scholarship and engagement much less clear cut in humanities research as to what precisely creates the change. • Outputs: absence of codified outputs transferred through market transactions that make a difference. • Uptake: question of measuring small uptakes not always recorded as economic transaction. • Progress: economic growth is ‘objective’ measure of progress, social progress much more subjective.  MeasuringHumsvalorizationfairly is attemptingtoachieve the impossible!

  8. Idea of a public value failure • Market failure – when market forcesproducesuboptimalsituation. • ‘Narrow’/ private interests win – overall public benefits cut. • Idea of public value failure (Bozeman)… • Clearlyheuristic of valorisation is verynarrow.  Does it lead to private intereststrumping public benefits?

  9. Table 1 Public failure and public policy, a diagnostic model for valorisation Source: after Bozeman & Sarewitz (2011), p. 17 modified by authors.

  10. Public value failure in AHR? • Prima facie case that model is inapplicable, and causing problems for humanities. • ‘Private benefits, STEM, policy makers • Is the idea of valorisation in AHR more a policy than theoretical concept? • Is the heuristic/ policy concept of valorisation in AHR a public value failure? • Does it correspond to particular private interests to the exclusion of wider public goods?

  11. Humanities in Dutch Universities

  12. Other research organisations • KNAW research institute • Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS) • FryskeAkademy (FA) • Huygens ING • International Institute of Social History (IISH) • Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV) • Meertens Institute • NIOD Institute for War, Holocaust and Genocide studies • Netherlands Interdisciplinairy Demographic Institute (NIDI) • Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NIAS) • Universities of AppliedSciencemainlyapplied research in creative arts field.

  13. The ‘perpetual crisis’ in Dutch Humanities 1987-date • ‘Kleine Letteren’: small subjects, small classes • Something uniquely Dutch – e.g Chair E Javanese • Unsustainable but desirable at start of 1980s • Focal point for debate about humanities • Series of reports on future of Kleine Letteren • 1990s, special funding but ‘neglect’ of other hums • ‘Windows on the world’: the modern view of hums • 2008 – Cohen Commission – righting the balance • Sustainability for all Humanities

  14. The linear model 2.0

  15. Research in Humanities landscape

  16. Where are ‘publics ’ in Dutch accountability debates? • There is strong public interest/ value in consuming humanities research • Publics do not necessarily fully understand the nature of the scientific endeavour, • Humanities research that is relevant may be both unpopular but a positive contribution • The system is extremely fragmented with little accountability or interdependence • There are many points of transformation from research projects to publics • Much accountability/ public steering falls to the Science Council, which is tiny

  17. A public value failure? • Fragmentation of public interest mediation • Public voices not clearly saying “we value this” • Govt wants to hear those voices • But defaults to the comfortable messages • Not chosing 1 model constructive ambiguity? • Postponing/ deferring decisions to avoid need to take the wrong choice. • Not taking choice prevents public value failure • BUT also stops sensible resolution

  18. Lengthy AHR chainstopublics • Biotech valorisation model requires strongly regulated exchange systems – IP, VC, NASDAQ • Public interest represented by FDA approval process – ethical governance framework • Lack of AHR valorisation governance framework • No signalling from society/ publics to AHR scholars on what matters • Question of a governance crisis, and public ethical frameworks for AHR? • Alternative accountability models?

  19. The problemwithmetrics • Janus-faced administrators want good (i.e. comparable) and applicable metrics • Valorisation systems (Pharma/ AHR) different: formality, governance, transactions, directness • Conflict allows reductio ad absurdum: • “the 2nd historian becomes fearful for his future… ghost-writes the King Alfred Book of Bread and Cake baking and then becomes the university’s Director of Research Strategy (Humanities)” Collini, 2012, p.12) • Where is the ‘public assent’ to particular scores? • Where can the public show they (don’t) care?

  20. Bringingpublics back into research valorisation • No clearly defined high level idea of social devt • Or low-level public signalling via output use • No public involvement in research governance • An ethical framework for AHR? • Nano/ GM/ HSR much further advanced • Key to effective value understanding: • understanding governance system • Identifying public ethical frameworks • Linking public ethics to decision-taking

More Related