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Institutional Autonomy. Thomas Estermann Head of Unit Governance, Autonomy & Funding Lithuanian Society of Young Researchers Conference Vilnius, Lithuania 20 September 2011. Brief Profile of EUA. Established in 2001 Non- governmental membership organisation
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Institutional Autonomy Thomas Estermann Head of Unit Governance, Autonomy & Funding Lithuanian Society of Young Researchers Conference Vilnius, Lithuania 20 September 2011
Brief Profile of EUA • Established in 2001 • Non-governmentalmembership organisation • 850 individual university members • 35 National Rectors’ Conferencesmembers • 46 countries • Independent voice for the university sector • Focus on EHEA and ERA
EUA’s work on autonomy • Conference series 2007-2009 • EUA – declarations (Glasgow, Lisbon, Prague) • Exploratory Study on university autonomy in Europe (2009) • Sketches broad trends in university autonomy and governance in 34 higher education systems • Autonomy Scorecard (2009-2011) • Maps and compares university autonomy and accountability through a set of common indicators • Enables governments to benchmark their progress on governance/autonomy reforms vis-à-vis other HE systems • Case studies: TRENDS reports, Financially Sustainable Universities, Institutional Evaluation Programme.
Why university autonomy? • Correlation between autonomy and: • Performance (Aghion et al., Ritzen) • Quality (Trends IV, V and 2010) • Degree of income diversification (higher share of additional income – EUDIS) • More sucessful internationalisation (Trends 2010) • Efficiency and effectiveness • Institutional autonomy • allows universities to decide on strategic priorities according to their strengths • does not automaticially lead to better performance, but it is an important prerequisite
Internal academic structures • Universities are free to determine their internal academic structures in approximately 2/3 of highereducationsystems. • In the remaining third, the law mayeitherlistfacultiesor provideguidelines. • In GR or TR, academic structures must beapproved by an externalauthority.
Public funding via block-grants In almost all systems, universitiesreceive block grantfunding, althoughseveral restrictions exist: In F, HU, IS LV,LT, PT, SK and SE the block grant is divided into broad categories between which funds cannot be moved. Often parts of the block grant are earmarked.
Keeping surplus on public funding In a majority of systems, universities are able to keep a surplus , but often other restrictions may still apply. Only in four countries, including Lithuania, can a surplus not be kept.
Restrictions – an example on staffing • Different labour laws across Europe provide a framework • Possible restrictions to staffing autonomy: • Number of posts restricted • Recruitment/selection procedures prescribed in law • Appointment made outside university • Academic staff needs to be accredited • Restrictions on promotion procedures • Limitations on dismissal • Salaries (institutional level, individual level) • Restrictions on incentives
Autonomy scores in Lithuania Organisationalautonomy Financial autonomy
Autonomy scores in Lithuaniacont. Staffingautonomy Academicautonomy
Which elements of autonomy are important? • More financially autonomous institutions with inappropriate organisational structures will not reap the benefits • Institutions less autonomous in financial and academic aspects will not be able to use greater freedom in organisational or staffing autonomy • All areas and elements of autonomy are related • Governance and autonomy reforms need to take a holistic approach • But no “one size fits all model”- each system needs to find balance between accountability and responsibility related to its background.
How to ensureaccountability? • Appropriate Quality assurance procedures • Financial transparency through Full costing • Appropriate reporting • Participation of external members in institutional decision-making
But is autonomy enough? • Sufficient funding • University autonomy and funding are mutually reinforcing factors • Leadership development - Key success factor to: • lead change in institution • reinforce strategic approach • implement successful income generation • Human Resource development and professionalisation to develop: • new skills • management capacity • new staff profiles
THANK YOU! For more information please contact: Thomas.estermann@eua.be www.eua.be