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Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity: A Call for


Solidarity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is providing a stark reminder that higher education
institutions, and faculty in particular, exist in a constant state of precarity. The
crisis triggered by the pandemic is revealing the underlying contradictions at the
heart of the employment relationship between faculty and administrative
managers at colleges and universities. We suggest that without the protection
provided by shared governance, tenure, and academic freedom, the core mission
of colleges and universities to pursue truth and produce knowledge—as carried
out by its faculty for the betterment of society—risks being eroded and eventually
eliminated altogether. A brief review of the City University of New York and the
evolution of the Professional Staff Congress, the union representing 30,000 staff
and faculty at CUNY, as well as administrators’ attacks on faculty at Ithaca
College, shows that it is crucial to organize beyond the walls of academia during
moments of crisis and establish connections with broader social movements.
Responses to the crisis triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic are an opportunity
to fight back against the commodification of public goods.

The health, social, political, and economic crisis triggered by the COVID-
19 pandemic is providing a stark reminder that higher education
institutions and faculty in particular exist in a constant state of precarity.
This precarity exists as one manifestation of the tension between academic
freedom as an ideal founded on the pursuit of truth for the betterment of
society and the logic of capitalism—defined as a social, political, and

Copyright American Association of University Professors, 2021


AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 2
Volume Twelve

economic system that undermines the public sector in favor of


privatization, the commodification of education, and attacks on the
working class through the exploitation of their labor. The crisis has forced
a moment of reckoning among faculty ranks with the reality that we do
not fully control the means of mental production at our institutions and
that shared governance, academic freedom, and tenure are inextricable
from labor organizing. Academic freedom and tenure cannot exist
without strong labor rights backed by collective bargaining agreements
and a network of social movements that aim to protect these rights.
Historically, faculty teaching at higher education institutions have
struggled with their class identity as private citizens who are allowed to
critique society within preordained parameters set by college presidents,
state legislatures, and boards of trustees. The key protections of tenure
and academic freedom are embedded within a social, political, and
economic matrix of material interests that are sharply manifested during
moments of crisis like the one we are facing now. As Benjamin Ginsberg
points out in The Fall of the Faculty, currently, “most professors possess
surprisingly little influence in their own schools’ decision-making
processes. . . . Power on campus is wielded mainly by administrators
whose names and faces are seldom even recognized by students or
recalled by alumni.”1 The lack of faculty power is currently being
translated into layoffs and increasing attacks on tenure and shared
governance. From this context we can understand the question of who
controls the material means of mental production at colleges and
universities as fundamentally a problem of class relations. More
specifically, as a class conflict between faculty and the political elite,
trustees, and administrators who manage higher education institutions.
As Clyde W. Barrow argues, “As a historical phenomenon, the problem
of academic freedom has appeared almost exclusively as an element of
the fundamental class conflicts associated with the development of

1
Benjamin Ginsberg, The Fall of the Faculty: The Rise of the All-Administrative University
and Why It Matters (New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 4.
3 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

advanced industrial society.”2 We can see the manifestation of this class


conflict in the proposed cuts to colleges and university systems
nationwide that have a direct, negative effect on faculty, staff, and
students.
A brief review of the City University of New York and the evolution
of the Professional Staff Congress (PSC), the union representing 30,000
staff and faculty at CUNY, as well as administrators’ attacks on faculty
ranks through planned layoffs at Ithaca College, reveals how this class
conflict has emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic. It is also worth
reviewing how patterns of disinvestment and austerity threaten the
recruitment, training, and mentoring of minority, poor, and working-class
students, as well as faculty of color.

COVID-19 and the Contingency of Faculty


In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic we are already seeing cases of
governing boards implementing “emergency employee terminations and
suspensions,” which include the firing of tenured faculty.3 Faculty and
staff at both private and public institutions are experiencing the crunch.4
Overall, between the beginning of the pandemic and January 2021, the US
Labor Department found that academic institutions have experienced a
net loss of approximately 650,000 workers.5 At CUNY, the
administration’s announcement that 2,800 adjunct faculty and part-time
staff “would not be reappointed in the fall due to cost-cutting measures

2
Clyde W. Barrow, Universities and the Capitalist State: Corporate Liberalism and the
Reconstruction of American Higher Education, 1894–1928 (Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press, 1990), 186.
3
Colleen Flaherty, “Suspending the Rules for Faculty Layoffs,” Inside Higher Ed, January
22, 2021, https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2021/01/22/firing-professors-kansas-
just-got-lot-easier.
4
Megan Zahneis, “The Latest Assault on Tenure,” Chronicle of Higher Education,
February 16, 2020, https://www.chronicle.com/article/the-latest-assault-on-tenure/.
5
Dan Bauman, “A Brutal Tally: Higher Ed Lost 650,000 Jobs Last Year,” Chronicle of
Higher Education, February 6, 2021, https://www.chronicle.com/article/a-brutal-tally-
higher-ed-lost-650-000-jobs-last-year.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 4
Volume Twelve

in anticipation of state and city funding cuts”6 triggered a lawsuit by the


PSC calling for the reversal of the layoffs.7 Unfortunately, the US Southern
District Court of New York sided with CUNY’s management, allowing
the layoffs to stand.8
During moments of crisis, we are all adjuncts facing precarious terms
of employment. Shared governance and the production of knowledge are
being actively decimated, along with the education of students, due to
management-directed policies. And at CUNY, the impact of the crisis is
disproportionately being felt by working-class students.9
As one recent study shows, state disinvestment results in “in higher
tuition and fees, greater student loan debt, decreased resources for
education and research, and fewer graduates and approved patent
applications from public colleges and universities.”10 Already some states,
including Georgia, Hawaii, Nevada, and North Dakota, are proposing
cuts to their university systems, followed by growing pressure to
implement “performance-based funding models” across the country.11

6
Marjorie Valbrun, “CUNY Layoffs Prompt Union Lawsuit,” July 6, 2020,
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2020/07/06/economic-fallout-pandemic-leads-
layoffs-cuny-and-union-lawsuit.
7
Barbara Bowen, “PSC Sues CUNY: Fights Layoffs,” PSC CUNY, July 1, 2020, https://psc-
cuny.org/news-events/psc-sues-cuny-fights-layoffs.
8
Maya Schubert, “Judge Throws Out PSC Lawsuit: The Brooklyn College Vanguard,”
accessed April 11, 2021, http://vanguard.blog.brooklyn.edu/2020/11/18/judge-throws-
out-psc-lawsuit/.
9
Douglas A. Medina, “Working-Class Students Doing Double Duty during Coronavirus,”
Common Dreams, opinion, April 15, 2020, https://www.commondreams.org/views/
2020/04/15/working-class-students-doing-double-duty-during-coronavirus.
10
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, “Consequences of State Disinvestment in Public
Higher Education: Lessons for the New England States,” Federal Reserve Bank of Boston,
February 21, 2019, https://www.bostonfed.org/publications/new-england-public-policy-
center-research-report/2019/consequences-of-state-disinvestment-in-public-higher-
education.aspx.
11
Emma Whitford, “State Higher Ed Funding for Next Year Looks Like a Mixed Bag,”
Inside Higher Ed, February 16, 2021,
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2021/02/16/governors-propose-cuts-increases-
and-other-changes-higher-ed-funding-depending-state.
5 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

And even though recent legislative attempts to eliminate tenure at Iowa’s


public universities have been defeated, the overall number of tenure and
tenure-track positions has been declining, according to the state’s board
of regents report.12
In New York State, Governor Andrew Cuomo’s proposed budget for
the 2022 fiscal year would have produced a net decrease in funding for
CUNY’s senior and community colleges. Governor Cuomo is facing an
impeachment probe and calls from top New York State leaders to resign,
as well as pressure from community and PSC members. From this
politically weak position, Cuomo approved a budget that actually restores
some funding and prevents tuition increases for students, among other
gains.13 A brief history of the PSC and the recent case of Ithaca College
both show that during a crisis, it is possible to fight back against austerity.

Protecting Faculty, Fighting for Justice: CUNY and Ithaca College


Moments of social and political crisis are displaced into colleges and
universities, particularly at public institutions. At CUNY, the PSC has
experienced two significant moments of fiscal crisis and retrenchment in
1976 and during the 1990s, both of which led to the firing of faculty and
staff.14 Both moments were also a historical moment for the PSC to
organize based on broader mandates that transcended faculty and staff
material interests to include the impact of austerity on the majority of the
students who occupy our classrooms while connecting to broader social
justice agendas.

12
Vanessa Miller, “Tenure Numbers Drop across Iowa Public Universities, Even as Bills to
Kill It Die,” Gazette, April 5, 2021, https://www.thegazette.com/education/tenure-
numbers-drop-across-iowa-public-universities-even-as-bills-to-kill-it-die/.
13
Barbara Bowen, “Statement on the FY2022 New York State Budget for CUNY,” PSC
CUNY, April 7, 2021, https://www.psc-cuny.org/news-events/statement-fy2022-new-
york-state-budget-cuny.
14
Karen W. Arenson, “CUNY Misused Fiscal ‘Emergency’ To Cut Staff and Costs, Judge
Rules (Published 1996),” New York Times, May 3, 1996,
https://www.nytimes.com/1996/05/03/nyregion/cuny-misused-fiscal-emergency-to-
cut-staff-and-costs-judge-rules.html.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 6
Volume Twelve

The Professional Staff Congress was founded in 1972 as part of a


merger between the Legislative Conference and the United Federation of
College Teachers.15 The founding also coincided with the beginning of the
fiscal crisis of the 1970s and the rise of what has come to be known as
neoliberalism, which prioritizes the privatization of public goods.16 The
1970s were deeply traumatizing and destabilizing for New York City and
CUNY in particular. The Open Admission policy was implemented in
1970, opening access to CUNY’s senior colleges to previously
marginalized Black and Puerto Rican students. Six years later, two
neoliberal and undemocratic institutions—the Emergency Financial
Control Board and the Municipal Assistance Corporation—put pressure
on CUNY to end free tuition in 1976. This period of “retrenchment”
affected everyone in New York City, particularly the poor and the
working class, while decimating the public sector and unions in
particular. It was also a time for organizing within the PSC to stop the
cuts, culminating in one of the largest rallies in the history of CUNY on
December 12, 1974.17
In 1991, nearly two decades later, CUNY was facing severe budgetary
cuts, leading the board of trustees to declare a “financial emergency.”
Subsequently, Governor Mario Cuomo, a Democrat, proposed additional
cuts and tuition hikes, a proposal exacerbated by reductions on city
contributions to CUNY, leading CUNY to declare financial exigency, in
which some college administrators fired staff and faculty, while others
avoided it.18
After a series of cuts, which were achieved through the reorganization
of departments and letting go of tenured faculty, the PSC brought a
lawsuit against CUNY. The initial lawsuit heard by the state Supreme
Court, with Justice Alice Schlesinger presiding, found that “the university
violated its own retrenchment rules by taking actions under a supposed

15
Irwin Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress: Professional Staff Congress/CUNY,” CUNY
Digital History Archive, April 14, 1997, https://cdha.cuny.edu/items/show/2812.
16
David Harvey, A Brief History of Neoliberalism (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005).
17
Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress,” 12.
18
Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress,” 25, 26.
7 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

financial emergency in June 1995 when there was considerable evidence


that such an emergency no longer existed.” CUNY appealed this decision.
Ultimately, Schlesinger’s ruling was reversed by the Appellate Division
of New York’s Supreme Court, except for the reduction of credits from
128 to 120 for a baccalaureate degree and 64 to 60 for an associate degree.
Both CUNY and the PSC appealed the decision to New York’s Court of
Appeals.19 The PSC was turned down by the court and eventually, on
November 1997, the board of trustees and the PSC came to an agreement
about the reduction of credits.20
The upshot of this incident is revealing. PSC president Irwin
Polishook, when asked why the university acted in the way it did, said,
"The declaration of exigency was largely a pretext to transform the
university."21 The transformation Polishook refers to is the governance
over academic issues that the board of trustees was pushing through
under retrenchment as well as faculty’s employment relationship to the
college. This incident illustrates the precarity that faculty at CUNY have
confronted during moments of crisis. It also underscores how
administrators exert power and control over faculty and students.
Most recently, downsizing at Ithaca College has emerged as another
egregious attempt to eliminate faculty jobs by administrative fiat. It is also
a case study that warrants a close look at how equity, diversity, and
inclusion can be misused to justify faculty layoffs and departmental
restructuring. Ithaca College first announced drastic cuts to its faculty
ranks in October 2020, targeting over 130 “full-time equivalent”
positions.22 Creating a direct, causal link between student enrollment and
faculty hiring, the college says that “enrollment decline” of approximately
“700 students over 10 years, pre-pandemic, while full-time faculty
positions increased by over 50,” is the main reason for the planned cuts.

19
Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress,” 28, 30.
20
CUNY, “CUNY Board Meeting Minutes,” CUNY Policy (blog), 176–77,
https://policy.cuny.edu/minutes/, accessed February 22, 2021.
21
Quoted in Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress,” 28–31.
22
Colleen Flaherty, “Ithaca Announces Sweeping Faculty Cuts,” Inside Higher Ed,
October 15, 2020, https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2020/10/15/ithaca-
announces-sweeping-faculty-cuts.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 8
Volume Twelve

Purportedly, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the cuts that were
originally part of a “five-year strategic vision.”23
As of January 2021, Ithaca College administrators have already fired
at least thirty-eight faculty members.24 The firings triggered an organized
response by college alumni and current faculty.25 The backlash has led to
the creation of Ithaca College’s first AAUP chapter, which is calling for
the rejection of the cuts.26 As of the writing of this article, the IC AAUP
chapter is circulating a petition that specifically calls for “shared
governance, an extended timeline and increased financial transparency
throughout the Academic Program Prioritization (APP) process.” As it
stands, “The college is planning to eliminate 116 full-time equivalent
faculty positions and 26 departments and majors and programs.”27
Pointing to the COVID-19 crisis—which has exacerbated a pattern of
declining student enrollments—IC’s president and provost, Shirley M.
Collado and La Jerne Terry Cornish, respectively, have insisted that the
“business model” of the college is not working and it is their responsibility
to implement “significant strategic changes.”28 Their public response is a
direct counternarrative to the resistance by alumni and faculty at the

23
Colleen Flaherty, “Ithaca Announces Sweeping Faculty Cuts.”
24
“Ithaca College Layoffs, as of January 2021,” Google Docs,
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1_GS-
Pjp4l92vJk5JGo1QByZLTeD0UOt0TngZwDI7dL4/edit?usp=embed_facebook, accessed
May 11, 2021; Caitlin Holtzman, Elizabeth Kharabadze, and Syd Pierre, “IC Organizations
Hold Events to Discuss Impacts of APP," Ithacan, April 29, 2021,
https://theithacan.org/news/ic-organizations-hold-events-to-discuss-app-impacts-on-
bipoc/.
25
Colleen Flaherty, “The Growing Ithaca Resistance,” Inside Higher Ed, February 8, 2021,
https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2021/02/08/growing-resistance-against-cuts-
ithaca.
26
Alexis Manore, “IC AAUP Circulates Petition to Reject Faculty and Program Cuts,"
Ithacan, February 18, 2021, https://theithacan.org/news/ic-aaup-circulate-petition-to-
reject-faculty-and-program-cuts/.
27
Manore, “IC AAUP Circulates Petition.”
28
Shirley M. Collado and La Jerne Terry Cornish, “Now Is the Time for Hard Decisions,"
Inside Higher Ed, opinion, February 18, 2021,
https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2021/02/18/president-and-provost-ithaca-
college-describe-why-they-think-strategic-change.
9 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

college. Most telling is their framing of tenure as a “privileged”


employment category that “reflects an inequitable paradigm” at the
college and in faculty governance and employment.
In response, the Ithaca College AAUP chapter challenged the
assumptions made by Collado and Cornish and asked,
Why is the solution not rather to extend these protections throughout
the full faculty, an initiative to which the institution has been constantly
resistant over the last decade? Further, why not encourage and facilitate
the unionization of all staff at Ithaca College, to ensure that staff will also
be afforded the job tenure and protection they are entitled to? How does
making all workers contingent and expendable drive “systemic change
that dismantles the status quo”? Why must so many college and
university administrators insist that the only way to be fair is for everyone
to expect less?29
Tenure protection for faculty who earn it is at the heart of the
employment relationship that strengthens academic freedom and faculty
governance. At the same time, Collado and Cornish appeal for readers to
understand that they are both “women of color who are driving systemic
change that dismantles the status quo.” And that, “because one of [their]
strategic planning goals is to be a national model for colleges committed
to the values of diversity, equity and inclusion, achieving this goal is
important to [them] and a constant consideration in [their] decision-
making process.”
This framing and narrative for justifying the elimination of faculty
jobs and the restructuring and elimination of entire academic
departments at Ithaca College is dangerous. It amounts to a political
weaponization of diversity, equity, and inclusion agendas for the purpose
of decimating tenure, academic freedom, and faculty governance—all of
which clearly has a negative impact on students. Collado and Cornish
reveal the fundamentally corporate, managerial, and class-driven politics

29
Ithaca College AAUP, “Questioning the Assumptions behind Budget Cuts," Inside
Higher Ed, letter, March 2, 2021,
https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2021/03/02/ithaca-college-aaup-questions-
assumptions-behind-budget-plan-letter.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 10
Volume Twelve

behind austerity measures that we will continue to see across the higher
education sector. In this regard, both the CUNY and Ithaca cases expose
the class dimension of austerity measures that target faculty: any austerity
measure that eliminates faculty, departments, and courses will inevitably
trickle down to all students.
As the IC case and others show, reasons cited for declaring
restructuring of higher education institutions rely on claims of financial
“near exigency.”30 At their core, these claims are political and economic
attacks on academic freedom because they reduce the ability of faculty
and support staff to produce knowledge and educate students. These
cases also strike at the heart of faculty’s principle of self-governance,
which translates to workplace democracy. Administrators and
legislatures are pushing the limits of what it means to declare financial
exigency. At the core of these attacks is the struggle to control and define
the terms of labor that faculty members adhere to at their institutions, as
the CUNY and Ithaca cases show. Now more than ever, austerity
measures executed by state legislatures, boards of trustees, and
administrators are having a significant impact on students and faculty.
The impact will have both immediate and long-term consequences for
academic freedom, shared governance, and tenure, which will
undoubtedly have a disproportionate impact on underrepresented and
vulnerable faculty and staff.

Austerity Threatens Vulnerable, Underrepresented, and Working-


Class Students and Faculty
Implicit in the practice of academic freedom is the promise of social
justice. Academic freedom thrives in the presence of diverse ways of
knowing and in environments composed of multiple perspectives,
histories, and traditions. Institutions of higher education advertise and
promote themselves as “diverse” by offering statistical racial and
sometimes socioeconomic data on their student bodies as “selling points”
to attract applicants. As gatekeepers to middle-class status for many
students, universities are perceived to be critical architects of the social

30
Zahneis, “The Latest Assault on Tenure.”
11 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

fabric by offering new generations the power of knowledge and the


pursuit of scholarship. Education as a public good confers the possibility
of civic engagement, social mobility, and intergenerational transmission
of its benefits. Education has long been known to be a path to achieving
American ideals that are in theory promised to everyone. The promise of
education for the most vulnerable students, however, is now under grave
threat.
Disinvestment in public higher education has coincided with
increasing numbers of minoritized, immigrant, and first-generation
students enrolling in higher education institutions.31 Uniting them is their
working-class identity. Decreases in public support, through tax-levy
funding, have led minority-serving public institutions and private
institutions to raise tuition and fees, creating additional barriers for
students seeking higher education. Given that intergenerational wealth
gaps have been steadily increasing over the past several decades, many
students do not have the wherewithal to manage these additional costs.
After minority enrollment began to rise in the 1980s and early 1990s, years
of subsequent disinvestment have led to a decline in enrollment.32 While
minority students are losing ground through lagging enrollment and
graduation rates, faculty are likewise struggling with
underrepresentation in the academy.
Diversity among faculty is of critical value to the protection and
promulgation of academic freedom, and its precarity is increasingly
recognized in the literature. Despite being purported as a race-neutral
concept, in practice, academic freedom is fraught with the dynamics of
race, class, and gender. Faculty of color report that, despite being aware

31
QianQian Yu, “If Tuition Rises . . . : . . . Does Racial and Ethnic Minority Student
Enrollment Plummet?,” ProQuest,”
https://search.proquest.com/openview/eb2eaf33c9aa8c54c113eeb92503397c/1?pq-
origsite=gscholar&cbl=47536, accessed February 20, 2021.
32
Ben Miller, “It’s Time to Worry about College Enrollment Declines among Black
Students,” Center for American Progress, September 28, 2020,
https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/education-
postsecondary/reports/2020/09/28/490838/time-worry-college-enrollment-declines-
among-black-students/.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 12
Volume Twelve

of their right to academic freedom, they are hindered from exercising this
right in their institutions due to their social identities, fear of reprisal or
discrimination, and rank.33 In essence, the failure to hire, retain, and
promote these faculty leaves those few who remain in the academy
particularly vulnerable and overburdened.
Austerity measures have resulted in cuts to research funding, faculty
release time for scholarship, and travel budgets for conferences and
presentations. When faculty are unable to access the means of mental
production for scholarly work, their careers are hampered. This results in
denial of tenure, promotion, faculty dissatisfaction, and turnover.
Students have fewer opportunities to conduct collaborative or mentored
research projects, and faculty’s administrative demands limit student
access to faculty knowledge. Less access to faculty mentors decreases
students’ ability to develop scholarly trajectories of their own.
Minority serving institutions, including several CUNY colleges,
receive less funding than predominantly white institutions.34 For students
of color, particularly students who are the first generation in their families
to attend college, academic success becomes elusive. They are hampered
by cuts to financial aid, scholarships, as well as academic, social, and
mental health support services. The lack of adequate support limits
students’ ability to advance to the doctoral level and follow a trajectory
toward their own participation in the academy. Developing a robust cadre
of racially and economically diverse scholars requires early investment, at
the undergraduate and community-college level.
There is widespread awareness that all areas of academic and
scientific research need investigators from diverse racial, ethnic, and
economic backgrounds. The inclusion of diverse perspectives has been

33
Holley M. Locher, “Academic Freedom for Whom? Experiences and Perceptions of
Faculty of Color,” PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 2013,
http://conservancy.umn.edu/handle/11299/150960.
34
Walter R. Allen et al., “From Bakke to Fisher: African American Students in U.S. Higher
Education over Forty Years,” RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social
Sciences 4, no. 6 (2018): 41, https://doi.org/10.7758/rsf.2018.4.6.03.
13 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

shown to yield results that benefit society at-large.35 While the


overwhelming dearth of minority scholars is being addressed nationally
through pre- and postdoctoral fellowships and early career grants,36 these
highly competitive awards are aimed at those who have already moved
into the highest levels of academia. In general, while these awards
prioritize minority scholars, they benefit a select few and do little to make
a transformative impact on the landscape. And despite these few
initiatives, minority researchers remain underrepresented and their work
grossly underfunded.37
Due to the pandemic, many universities have temporarily, or in some
cases, permanently suspended their doctoral programs.38 Doctoral
candidates often rely on funding to complete their training, and all
students require reliable, consistent senior faculty mentorship to
successfully conduct their independent research and satisfy the
requirements of the degree. There is already a paucity of minority
students in doctoral degree programs. The loss of program viability will
reduce the faculty diversity of future higher education institutions.
Faculty of color are more likely to mentor doctoral students of color than

35
Hannah A. Valantine and Francis S. Collins, “National Institutes of Health Addresses
the Science of Diversity,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112, no. 40
(October 6, 2015): 12240–42, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1515612112.
36
Hannah A. Valantine and Francis S. Collins, “National Institutes of Health Addresses
the Science of Diversity,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112, no. 40
(October 6, 2015): 12240–42, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1515612112; American
Psychological Association, “Developing Minority Biomedical Research Talent in
Psychology,” https://www.apa.org/pi/oema/programs/recruitment/minority-research,
accessed February 20, 2021.
37
Mercedes R. Carnethon, Kiarri N. Kershaw, and Namratha R. Kandula, “Disparities
Research, Disparities Researchers, and Health Equity,” Journal of the American Medical
Association 323, no. 3 (January 21, 2020): 211–12,
https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2019.19329.
38
Megan Zahneis, “More Doctoral Programs Suspend Admissions. That Could Have
Lasting Effects on Graduate Education,” Chronicle of Higher Education, September 28,
2020, https://www.chronicle.com/article/more-doctoral-programs-suspend-admissions-
that-could-have-lasting-effects-on-graduate-education.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 14
Volume Twelve

are white faculty. The effects of this potential cascade of lost mentorship
opportunities may have a chilling effect on equality and social justice.39
The effects of COVID-19 on faculty are disproportionately felt by
women and faculty of color, revealing that the contingency of faculty is
both gendered and racialized. Women often find themselves in caregiving
roles during times of crisis. This has been well-documented during the
pandemic, as public school closures have forced women to manage
childcare while working from home, or to leave the workforce entirely.40
For tenure-track faculty, this means reductions in research and service,
leading to the curtailment of career advancement. For non-tenure-track or
adjunct faculty, caregiving may result in fewer teaching hours or time to
interact with students, which can result in lower wages, unfavorable
student evaluations, and further marginalization of an already
precariously employed group. The concerns of women of color faculty
may be further exacerbated by having to take on unpaid and
unrecognized work such as organizing around, or participating in, social
justice movements (such as labor organizing or Black Lives Matter).41 The
added pressures and precarity triggered by the pandemic may provide
fertile ground for faculty to reconceptualize their professional identities
away from kinship with management and toward a working-class
identity.
This shift calls for a reevaluation of faculty’s role in the political arena
as advocates for working-class constituencies. Resistance to ongoing
austerity measures and acknowledging that everyone, regardless of their
identity, is fundamentally vulnerable in moments of crisis is the first step

39
Kecia M. Thomas, Leigh A. Willis, and Jimmy Davis, “Mentoring Minority Graduate
Students: Issues and Strategies for Institutions, Faculty, and Students,” Equal
Opportunities International 26, no. 3 (April 3, 2007): 178–92,
https://doi.org/10.1108/02610150710735471.
40
Jonathan Rothwell and Lydia Saad, “How Have U.S. Working Women Fared during the
Pandemic?,” Gallup.com, March 8, 2021,
https://news.gallup.com/poll/330533/working-women-fared-during-pandemic.aspx.
41
Sarah Trainer et al., “Exploring the Gendered Impacts of COVID-19 on Faculty,”
January 24, 2021, https://peer.asee.org/exploring-the-gendered-impacts-of-covid-19-
on-faculty.
15 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

toward a solidarity-based approach to organizing within and outside of


the academy. Faculty can organize around calls for universal policies that
will benefit everyone. Making public higher education free for all and
cancelling student debt would strengthen any initiative that aims to
diversify academic institutions while building solidarity.42 This is a key
component of what needs to be done, with faculty at the forefront of the
struggle.

Conclusion: Faculty as Vanguard


Since its inception, the PSC has fought against management control over
academic freedom and faculty governance. Examples include its
campaigns against the “tenure quotas” proposed by two CUNY
chancellors: Albert Bowker in the late 1960s and Robert Kibbee in the
1970s.43 It was no accident that the tenure quotas were the first major
political and organizational challenges the PSC faced as a union. The
history of the PSC, CUNY, and the Ithaca College case reveal what Clyde
Barrow argues regarding class relations in academia: “It is the relation of
class conflict that defines the ground on which we understand and
measure the extent of autonomy."44 This suggests that class conflict and
autonomy—as expressed through faculty governance, academic freedom,
and tenure—must be understood as part and parcel of their local, concrete
historical moments. During moments of crisis, faculty have to ally with
other social movements, particularly labor-based movements.
Currently, the PSC is embarking on one of its most ambitious
organizing drives, A New Deal for CUNY (ND4C).45 It is being organized

42
Claire Bond Potter, "The Only Way to Save Higher Education Is to Make It Free,” New
York Times, opinion, June 5, 2020,
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/05/opinion/sunday/free-college-tuition-
coronavirus.html; Bernie Sanders, “Free College, Cancel Debt,” Bernie Sanders Official
Website, https://berniesanders.com/issues/free-college-cancel-debt/, accessed
February 21, 2021.
43
Yellowitz, “25 Years of Progress,” 8.
44
Barrow, Universities and the Capitalist State, 256.
45
“ND4C Summary,” CUNY Rising Alliance, https://cunyrisingalliance.org/nd4csummary,
accessed February 20, 2021.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 16
Volume Twelve

under the auspices of the CUNY Rising Alliance, a coalition of “students,


workers and communities” coming together to support CUNY’s mission
to educate New York City’s working-class.46 ND4C calls for a five-year
phase-in of four key demands: make CUNY free for in-state students; hire
more mental health counselors and academic advisors; increase the ratio
of full-time faculty to students and professionalize adjunct compensation;
and increase investment in the capital budget. CUNY promotes itself as
one of “the greatest urban universities in the world” providing
“opportunity” and a “quality, accessible education, regardless of
background or means.”47 Should the ND4C demands be met, it would
indeed live up to that moniker.
Meeting the ND4C demands would strengthen academic freedom,
faculty governance, and tenure protections by bringing together faculty,
staff, students, community members together to protect the promise that
a public higher education provides: educating students for the betterment
of society. College teaching is arguably one of the few professions that
embodies truth and autonomy as its operating principles. Within a
capitalist society where metrics and profits dominate social exchanges,
protecting the labor rights and academic freedom of faculty is an
existential endeavor.
At Ithaca College, Dan Breen, an associate professor and chair of the
college’s newly created AAUP chapter, explains that the administration’s
austerity measures were the catalyst for the creation of the AAUP chapter.
Working closely with the part-time faculty union, Students for Labor
Action, a student and faculty group called Open the Books, the local
Worker Center, and a very active alumni group, community members
have been organizing to resist the cuts.48
The most powerful tool faculty at colleges and universities possess is
their ability to withhold their labor, bringing the entire process of teaching

46
“About CUNY Rising Alliance,” CUNY Rising Alliance,
https://cunyrisingalliance.org/about, accessed February 21, 2021.
47
“The Greatest Urban University in the World,” City University of New York, accessed
February 21, 2021; “The City University of New York,” City University of New York (blog),
https://www.cuny.edu/, accessed February 21, 2021.
48
Dan Breen, April 15, 2021.
17 Class Politics, Crisis, and Opportunity
Douglas A. Medina and Anya Y. Spector

and learning to a halt. We must revive this tool by organizing to eliminate


the notorious Taylor Law, which affects public employees in New York.49
Understood from this perspective, strong labor rights, solidarity forged in
the midst of political, social, and economic struggles and buttressed by
coalition-building and political organizing, are the most effective means
to protect academic freedom while supporting broader social
movements.50
Faculty and staff labor rights are inherently about autonomy,
academic freedom, self-governance, and the protection of these rights
through tenure. These rights exist as a function of who controls the
resources available to faculty and staff at higher education institutions.
The infrastructure available to faculty and staff to do their jobs (Including
access to technology, as we have seen during the COVID-19 crisis) is part
of a labor relation rooted in a broader social relation of who controls what
we do and how we do it. As high-level administrators assume control of
academic matters through reallocation of financial resources, they are also
controlling the context in which we educate our students. In other words,
the social and class relations and the power dynamics that they reveal are
becoming more evident during this moment of crisis.
The racial, gender, and economic inequalities and their impacts that
we are witnessing within higher education intuitions are fundamentally
rooted in these power dynamics and social relations that capitalism
produces. And while each historical crisis reveals the limits of exercising
labor rights, it also reveals the possibilities that lie ahead. As both the
CUNY and IC cases show, asserting and defending our labor rights as
faculty is the starting point for building solidarity within our workplace,
while linking our struggles with broader social movements. The crisis is
an opportunity to remind the public that faculty and the work that we do

4949
James Gray Pope, “Workers’ Only True Weapon,” Jacobin, October 2, 2018,
https://jacobinmag.com/2018/10/strike-taylor-law-de-blasio-cuomo.
50
Labor Commission on Racial and Economic Justice, “A Brief History of Labor, Race and
Solidarity,” https://racial-justice.aflcio.org/blog/est-aliquid-se-ipsum-flagitiosum-
etiamsi-nulla, accessed February 2, 2021.
AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom 18
Volume Twelve

at colleges and universities is carried out in the pursuit of truth for the
benefit of society and in defense of public goods.

Douglas A. Medina is instructor of political and social sciences at Stella and


Charles Guttman Community College. He is currently a PhD candidate in the
Political Science Program at the CUNY Graduate Center. His research is focused
on the political economy of higher education and the influence of race and class
politics—as well as mental health—on approaches to solving poverty and
inequality. Anya Y. Spector is an assistant professor of human services at Stella
and Charles Guttman Community College. Her research focuses on the
emergence of professional identity in community college human services
students, and the practices of psychosocial health providers working at the
intersection of substance use and HIV.

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