US higher education has escaped, just, from having to聽endure another four years of Donald聽Trump.
That gives it a chance to recover from the pandemic, win new government aid for its students, re-emerge as the world鈥檚 top education destination, avoid major losses in its scientific enterprise and 鈥 perhaps 鈥 work to deter such threats from rising up again.
But will it? And聽how?
Looking around, US higher education can comfort itself with reminders of its Trump-era survivalism, at least until the pandemic. Total state and local funding for several years, and institutions 蹿别苍诲别诲听辞蹿蹿 Mr聽Trump鈥檚 threats of major cuts in federal research funding.
And upon taking the US presidency in January, Joe Biden can unilaterally reverse much of Mr聽Trump鈥檚 antagonism聽towards international researchers and foreign-born students with the regulatory and enforcement powers of the executive branch.
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On balance, though, the situation being left by Mr聽Trump is undeniably tough. With federal student aid already shrinking, the pandemic has pushed down autumn enrolment, slicing a fifth off the $650聽billion (拢500聽billion) that US colleges and universities spend each year.
As such, the upbeat notion of a politically friendly president arriving with his college-teacher wife may be more than offset by a Republican-controlled Senate bent on obstruction, ongoing pandemic lockdowns and a badly battered economy.
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The nation鈥檚 chief higher education lobbyist, Terry Hartle, said there could well be some bipartisan progress in Congress for aiding minority and low-income students and institutions.
US universities also hope that Congress will finally approve a new coronavirus bailout bill. The latest, stuck for weeks in the Senate, would to the $14聽billion that colleges received in the early days of the pandemic.
But beyond that, said Dr Hartle, the senior vice-president for government relations at the American Council on Education, lies 鈥渁聽much tougher聽slog鈥.
In particular, he said, Mr Biden and higher education can expect a 鈥渟erious problem鈥 fulfilling the campaign trail promises of tuition-free college and large-scale debt forgiveness.
Prospects look even worse聽at the local level, where public institutions traditionally have obtained most of their government support. States generally cannot borrow money, making them more likely to cut from their colleges than to give to them. 鈥淚n that environment, things can get very bad for higher education very quickly,鈥 Dr Hartle said.
Experts watching the action from beyond Washington tend to agree.
鈥淗igher education and its lobbying associations have a聽lot of聽work to聽do,鈥 said John Thelin, a professor of the history of higher education and public policy at the University of Kentucky.
After four years of Mr聽Trump, Professor Thelin said, 鈥渉aving a聽president-elect who is supportive聽of and sympathetic聽to higher education as a broad topic is more a sigh of relief than a cause for celebration鈥.
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Compounding that anxiety, some experts in academia fear that their leaders have grown so absorbed by their daily emergencies that they are paying too little attention to the long-term social deterioration that keeps spawning the crises.
The severity of the pandemic and the depth of the accompanying recession are widely attributed to a US president elected 鈥 and then nearly re-elected 鈥 on the strength of voters he embraces for their of the divisive tactics he employs.
Yet US higher education, experts warned, appeared to be doing relatively little to direct its prodigious talents in the service of finding the most effective response to such behaviour.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 see the leadership out there to take that step,鈥 said Stanley Katz, a professor of public and international affairs at Princeton University. 鈥淭hese people are so preoccupied with meeting this year鈥檚 budget and dealing with the pandemic.鈥
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The inertia, Professor Thelin said, reflected a system of US higher education that cherishes its diversity but cannot identify the moments when it really needs to work together.
鈥淗igher education groups bicker among themselves, always trying to get an edge for their group over another group,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t may have worked when funding was abundant, but it has not been productive or effective for several decades.鈥
And for those who agree that higher education needs to take a more expansive view of its self-interest, there is little agreement on the best course of聽action.
One of higher education鈥檚 best-known reformers, Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University, very much recognises the need. The country was getting worn down by people angry at their condition and blaming others for聽it, Professor Crow said.
鈥淲hat they need to be is upset with institutions 鈥 including universities 鈥 that have let them down,鈥 he said.
Professor Crow鈥檚 prescriptions would include expanding online technologies, implementing research-proven teaching methods and building partnerships between institutions to make education far more accessible and effective.
ASU also is among a number of US universities getting more involved at the school level 鈥 many even run their own high schools 鈥 to make a difference in an environment where most Americans still do聽not even reach college.
As they seek to revive government investment in higher education, Professor Crow said, Mr聽Biden and his team needed to prioritise incentives for transformational change. 鈥淚鈥檓 hopeful that these guys will figure that out,鈥 he said.
Yet at the moment, many US higher education leaders appear too complacent, said Thomas Buchanan, a US national who studies the situation from afar as a senior lecturer in modern US history at the University of Adelaide.
US university leaders might recognise the threat they face from widespread and prolonged social dysfunction, but they just don鈥檛 know what to do about聽it, Dr Buchanan said. Rather than back away, however, institutions should treat it like an important research problem and get their best minds to work on聽it, he argued.
Educators, Dr Buchanan said, must 鈥渢ackle the country鈥檚 political divides head-on as a learning outcome鈥.
After decades of watching the situation develop and grow worse, Professor Katz was wary of what might come next. He recalled presenting a paper to an academic conference many years ago that of a 鈥渏ust university鈥. He remembered the president of a major university, offering a quick assessment afterwards, saying: 鈥淪tan, it鈥檚 OK for a Princeton professor to write crap like that. But the public universities can鈥檛 worry about a problem like justice.鈥
Dr Hartle said that US colleges and universities did appreciate the dangers posed to them and others by the growing phenomenon of partisan rejection of science and factual evidence. But the proper response, he said, might not necessarily involve any aggressive new strategy from academic leaders.
鈥淭he best thing for higher education, and the best thing for America,鈥 he said, 鈥渨ould be a cooling of political tensions and a renewed commitment to bipartisanship and compromise.鈥
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