A recent 探花视频 article on the Welsh Assembly stepping in to defend institutional autonomy in the drafting of the Higher Education (Wales) Bill made me strangely nostalgic.
I found myself yearning wistfully for the days when there was actual legislation for higher education (however imperfect), that was subjected to actual parliamentary scrutiny, rather than shadowy and vague policy developments (often reactive) that are adopted without proper challenge or legal basis.
That may just be the lawyer in me and I can entirely see that others might regard an absence of legislation as being optimal for preserving institutional autonomy. But not, in my view, when the result is a de facto encroachment into autonomy, often without clear legal basis.
Over the last few years we have seen a number of developments, often with the consent of the sector, that undoubtedly have the potential to erode the principle of institutional authority.
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These include:
- The giving the Higher Education Funding Council for England the power to require an institution鈥檚 governing body to nominate a new accounting officer 鈥渋n extremis鈥 (a reaction to the London Metropolitan University funding clawback crisis) 聽
- The extension in the same document of the definition of institutions at 鈥渉igher risk鈥 to include concerns around risk management, control and governance arrangements
- The development of the so that a finding that an institution 鈥渄oes not meet UK expectations鈥 needs to be reported as a 鈥渟erious incident鈥 under its charitable reporting obligations and could be used to trigger a Charity Commission inquiry and intervention
- The requirement in the to inform Hefce of any 鈥渕aterial change, including significant developments that could impact on the mutual interests of the HEI and Hefce鈥. The evolution of this requirement is instructive: in 2008 the obligation was only to report 鈥渕aterial adverse events鈥; by 2014 it has become any 鈥渕aterial change鈥 and the institution is obliged not only to consider 鈥渁dverse鈥 in the context of its own interests, but also Hefce鈥檚.
- An obligation on the accountable officer to inform Hefce about major changes in strategy, plans for major restructuring and merger. Not only does this raise the spectre of meetings at which vice-chancellors are asked to defend their strategic plans to Hefce officers(no doubt highly unlikely in practice), but it also needs to be compared to the deregulation offered to FE colleges, which are now free to take decisions to merge and dissolve without funding council or Secretary of State consent.
- The development of a 鈥渧oluntary鈥 agreement relating to ,聽whereby if Hefce is not satisfied that an institution is complying with a range of obligations, it can require the institution to make specified changes to how it conducts itself, having taken 鈥渁ppropriate advice鈥 (from whom it is not clear). If this fails to satisfy Hefce, it can then invite the Secretary of State to de-designate the institution.
Taken together that鈥檚 quite a list of powers, especially built on Hefce鈥檚 relatively narrow statutory duties.
Although I accept it is unlikely to do so, the funding council can in theory put pressure on a governing body to change its vice-chancellor by questioning the individual鈥檚 suitability to continue as accounting officer.
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If the governing body refuses to change accounting officers, could this be regarded as a failure of governance and trigger Hefce鈥檚 institutional engagement strategy - ultimately leading to publication of the institution鈥檚 non-compliance or withdrawal of funding (or even de-designation for the purposes of student support)?
If there is a problem with quality, Hefce can invite the Charity Commission (which will rely heavily on the funding council鈥檚 input in deciding how to proceed) to begin an inquiry. That could result in an intervention - including removing and replacing the governing body.聽
It isn鈥檛 clear what Hefce will do if it isn鈥檛 happy with an institution鈥檚 strategic plans, having been notified of them, but presumably this could include triggering 鈥渋nstitutional engagement鈥, and the consequences referred to above and below.
Finally, in its monitoring and compliance role for the purposes of designation for student support, Hefce has the power to require institutions to make changes, to commission and seek to impose action plans and to 鈥渄iscuss changes to strategic plans and market positioning鈥.聽
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Further non-compliance by a single institution could lead, according to the agreement, to new statutory regulations giving the Secretary of State the power to de-designate any institution, a power that is questionable at present.聽聽
None of this is likely to happen, I accept, but it could. And it has all happened without any democratic scrutiny, and on the basis of piecemeal agreement with the sector.
The provisions above compare to the powers that were intended to be given to the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales that concerned the Welsh Assembly as unacceptable incursions into institutional autonomy and 鈥渕icromanagement鈥. 聽
Perhaps some parliamentary scrutiny of what鈥檚 going on in England wouldn鈥檛 be a bad thing.
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