Academics working in Denmark鈥檚 biggest urban centres fear widespread job cuts as a government drive to redistribute student places to smaller cities and towns reaches its endgame.
Universities have been forced to draw up plans to cut their enrolments in Aalborg, Aarhus, Copenhagen and Odense聽by 10 per cent by 2030 under a decentralisation plan unveiled by ministers in May 2021. Institutions were left with the choice of relocating courses or shutting them down altogether.
Last week the final proposal was submitted by Aalborg University, which announced that it would end admissions for 18 courses to hit the target, including all social science and humanities programmes at its satellite campus in Copenhagen.
鈥淚t is a task we have not wanted, and a task that, no matter how it is solved, significantly affects our university,鈥 said聽Aalborg鈥檚 rector, Per Michael Johansen.聽Vice-chancellor Anne Marie Kanstrup said the cuts had been made strategically rather than uniformly across all programmes, which would have left Aalborg 鈥渁 smaller and a bit shabby version of itself鈥.聽
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鈥淲e鈥檙e shocked and rattled; we didn鈥檛 see this coming at all,鈥 said聽Stine Ejsing-Duun,聽an associate professor in the department of communication and psychology, who is based at Aalborg鈥檚 Copenhagen outpost. The loss of enrolments meant that her department would face a DKr16 million (拢1.8 million) annual shortfall, so potential redundancies were a 鈥渉uge concern for a lot of people鈥.聽
鈥淭raditionally, we rely on a lot of teaching. Most of us don鈥檛 get big external grants, so we are dependent on being able to deliver teaching for our programmes,鈥 said Hanne Tange, an associate professor of English and global studies聽at聽Aalborg.
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The university said it was 鈥渟till unclear鈥 what the plan will mean for finances and jobs since, like other institutions鈥 proposals, Aalborg鈥檚 will now form the basis of negotiations between the government and other political parties.聽
鈥淲e have tried our best and hope that the political parties behind the plan will be satisfied with that,鈥 said聽Jesper Langergaard, director of Universities Denmark.聽聽
He said聽most universities had proposed cuts of between 5 per cent and 6 per cent to student places in big cities, below the 10 per cent target, with about half as many new places being created elsewhere. 聽
鈥淲e are looking at a general scale-down of college graduates in Denmark,鈥 Mr Langergaard said. 鈥淲e still aren鈥檛 certain that future students will be interested in studying in the smaller cities, and this could cause the amount of university-educated workforce to take a further drop than the scale-down.鈥澛
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The cuts are being finalised amid continuing concern about attacks by politicians on disciplines such as gender and migration studies. Last year the Danish parliament, including the ruling Social Democratic Party, passed a resolution against 鈥渆xcessive activism鈥 in some academic fields, while funding for the humanities in general has been severely squeezed in recent years.
Olav Bertelsen, an associate professor in Aarhus University鈥檚 department of computer science, said a lack of funding for building up education in small towns and the dislocation of聽academics from their urban research bases would lead to 鈥渟econd rate鈥 courses.
He argued that the government could have offered funding incentives to create extra student places outside major cities rather than ultimatums.
鈥淭hey are using the stick instead of the carrot and that鈥檚 the problem,鈥 Dr Bertelsen said.聽
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Jobs in jeopardy as Danes force big-city universities to downsize
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