Nils Hoppe
Richard Hull
I am writing to add my voice to the widely shared deep disbelief and sadness at the proposed closure of PEAK and the discipline of Philosophy at Keele. This proposal is being tabled at precisely the time when nurturing and strengthening the study of Ethics and Philosophy is critically important.
My association with Keele runs deep. I taught and studied in the Department of Philosophy and, latterly, SPIRE, from 1997 until mid 2000. I have retained professional and personal contact with staff in Philosophy and at PEAK ever since. Amongst other things, this has resulted in collaborative publications, reciprocal initiatives between our respective institutions and the co-opting of expertise from PEAK to develop and publish reports for the Irish Council for Bioethics. Indeed, two of my former students are now employed by PEAK.
Suffice to say, I have first hand knowledge and experience of the excellent teaching and research that is being conducted at PEAK and in Philosophy at Keele. Your proposal threatens many fantastic scholars and, just as important, lovely people. In no way do they deserve to have been treated in the ways that are currently coming to light.
From the evidence that is being revealed now that a little transparency is emerging with respect to the background behind this proposal, some of the practices, policies and procedures of Keele University management have been, to say the least, ethically dubious. May I respectfully suggest that a more fitting proposal at this time would be that all of those involved in the management of the University avail of the excellent ethics training that is currently available at PEAK.
In addition, I respectfully urge you, in the strongest possible sense, to re-think this non-solution to more deep rooted problems and questions in Higher Education, before Keele University becomes intractably associated with the narrowing of scholarship and study based on misguided economic assessments. As is happening all too often in the University sector and in society more generally, this proposal looks at the cost of everything (unfairly it would seem) and the value of nothing.
Sincerely,
Richard Hull
PEAK response to Vice Chancellor's E-mail
Thank you very much for your message, and for taking the time to express your concern over what you have heard about proposals for academic restructuring at Keele. I appreciate the concerns and issues that you raise, and recognise the strong commitment to the discipline and its inherent value that underlies your communication.
[It is disingenuous to describe this as restructuring when in fact the proposal suggests closures: specifically, closure of the philosophy programme and the closure of PEAK. Although some ethics expertise (from PEAK) is to be absorbed by the School of Law, the majority of staff will be made redundant based on projected cuts. The assumption that PEAK as an entity could be absorbed into the School of Law by maintaining one or two individuals shows how poorly the management understand or appreciate the distinctive strengths and activities of the Centre. The closure of the philosophy programme will result in an absence of philosophy in Keele for the first time since its establishment in 1949.]
Reductions in funding mean that Keele has had to set a target of saving a total of £6.5m in staff costs. Can I reassure you that recommendations relating to the possible closure of programmes and disciplines at Keele in consequence of this need are made extremely reluctantly, and only after considerable consideration, deliberation and consultation. [We cannot comment on whether the consideration and deliberation was considerable but there was no consultation with staff affected. Figures have been gathered over several months with no explanation or disclosure of the review that was taking place. The proposals were disclosed to us on Wednesday the 16 March for the first time. They were then disclosed to the University as a whole that afternoon.] Any recommendations relating to specific disciplines are not in any way a judgement on the inherent academic and intellectual value of those disciplines, but are a reflection of a complex set of absolute and comparative operational, financial and academic-profile issues relating to individual disciplines, Schools and Faculties in the context of the University’s future well-being. Keele has a strong academic position, but must always seek to sustain that in the challenging financial and competitive arena of UK higher education in the future.
[This is perfectly accurate: the “inherent academic and intellectual value of [our] disciplines” are not in any way taken into account. Indeed, this is part of the problem. As the VC states, it is a purely financial decision. However, while we acknowledge that PEAK must be financially viable, we dispute the accounting system that has been used to calculate our financial contribution to the University. In these proposals PEAK, a post-graduate teaching centre, has been evaluated on the same accounting principles as any academic school that has undergraduate cohorts. They artificially isolate PEAK as though it was not part of the School of Law, of which it has been a part for over five years. The proposals for Senate make clear that the School as a whole is currently making a strong financial contribution to the University. Of course, undergraduate teaching is much more efficient, from a financial perspective. Ethics teaching at postgraduate level was separated from undergraduate philosophy teaching in a past restructuring exercise for which the philosophy programme and PEAK now seem to be punished. The financial review which was undertaken does not, as far as we can make out, include grant income or all of our postgraduate research income which would undoubtedly improve the outlook for the centre.
Furthermore, we cannot comment on the ‘complex set of absolute and comparative operational, financial and academic-profile issues’ used by the Staff Savings Working Group because the assessment methodology and the basis for calculating projected data have not been explained. It has not been made clear whether all units and sub-units of the university have been scrutinised or just specific sub-units. No explanation is given for why certain programmes or units are targeted. It is odd that other parts of the university have been asked to undertake cost savings while both PEAK and Philosophy have been targeted for total closure.]
For this reason, the review that produced the recommendations has been guided by the principles of:
a) Ensuring it reflects the University's overall strategy, including its size, academic shape, and range of activity, and enhances financial stability and sustainability.
[Given that the University’s current strategic plan includes a commitment to postgraduate teaching closing a centre that largely teaches postgraduates, like PEAK, appears contrary to this. We also find it difficult to understand why the Centre was assessed using a financial model more appropriate to undergraduate teaching.]
b) Recognising the importance of maintaining a breadth of academic disciplines and the need to position the University’s academic base to respond to both internal and external strategic drivers.
[Removal of philosophy and applied philosophy through the closure of both the philosophy programme and PEAK raises distinct difficulties for a university that claims to be comprehensive and committed to maintaining a breadth of academic disciplines.]
c) Minimising the impact of any changes on current and prospective students.
[The closure of PEAK will impact upon present students – how could it not? It is important to understand that most of our students study part-time, so any sudden cut in staff will immediately impact on the quality of teaching for current students. The University’s decision to announce these cuts with no consultation will also impact future recruitment on to our courses – how could it not? We contest this claim, which seems to be based on the assumption that one or two individuals absorbed into the law school, would be able to:
- maintain grant income
- teach across a range of undergraduate courses
- teach across a range of postgraduate courses
- maintain the distinctive environment which has contributed to PEAK’s distinctive and internationally recognised teaching and research]
In the case of the Centre for Professional Ethics, the careful financial modelling that has been applied to all academic areas of the University shows that the staff costs associated with the Centre exceeded its income by 19% in 2009/10, and on the basis of our forecasts will still be over 90% of income by 2013/14. In these circumstances it is incumbent upon us to find ways of addressing a structural problem, and to do so with reference to the principles outlined above. This is why the proposals that will be debated on 23 March by the University Senate include the recommendation that the Centre should not continue as a separate unit, but that some activities associated with the Centre should be identified for full integration with the Law School, which is committed to developing a more distinctive curriculum that includes ethics as an element of legal education. If this recommendation is accepted and implemented, then some of the Centre's activities will be continued, and some of the staff in the Centre will continue to work at Keele.
[There is no discussion of which activities will be maintained or how they will be maintained. We ourselves as a centre have tried to model what the retained posts would look like and doubt that it would be logistically possible for one or two individuals to cover undergraduate and postgraduate teaching, research, and administrative duties as outlined above.]
In the case of Philosophy, the careful financial modelling that has been applied to all academic areas of the University shows that income associated with the programme is projected to fall between now and 2013/14, with staff costs rising to over 90% of that income by 2013/14. In an environment where the number of EU undergraduates taking the subject cannot be increased without a negative impact on other parts of the University, and in the absence of evidence that Philosophy is in a position to achieve significant additional income through recruitment of overseas and/or postgraduate students, the University has no choice but to seek ways of addressing the problem, and to do so with reference to the principles outlined above. This is why the proposals that will be debated on 23 March by the University Senate include a recommendation that the Philosophy programme be closed, and that the income associated with the programme be retained within the discipline's parent School in order to underpin its financial stability and sustainability.
We have throughout this process considered alternative views on how such savings might be achieved. This process has been thorough but the University will consider other options that can be shown to deliver the required savings in the required timescale. We have also ensured that we have followed due process not simply as required by statute but also by our desire to consult fully and to ensure those at risk of being negatively affected are made aware at the earliest opportunity.
[The claim that the University is open to proper consultation and discussion of alternative restructuring options is belied by the fact that this proposal was released at the last possible minute to be discussed at Senate on 23 March and the subsequent Council meeting on 7 April. The group that undertook this review could have been open about what it was they were doing and/or consulted with the Centre during the course of their deliberations – they chose to do neither.]
The proposals for reducing pay costs are the basis of consultation with Senate, and with the University Council in early April. If the proposals are approved by Council then there will follow a further period of consultation, during which we shall endeavour to achieve the required savings by voluntary means. At all times our primary concerns will be for the experience of current and future students and support for staff who may be affected by the proposals.
[Given the weaknesses of the arguments outlined by the Vice Chancellor, highlighted above, we would strongly encourage consideration of alternative restructuring and cost-saving options in a genuinely open and consultative manner. It is clear that as the proposal currently stands, a negative impact on current and prospective students and remaining staff will be both considerable and inevitable.]
James Wilson
I am dismayed to see the proposed closure of PEAK. I and all my colleagues in the field are baffled by this: the Centre for Professional Ethics is known worldwide for its rigorous and philosophical approach to bioethics.
I worked in PEAK from 2004-8, directing the MA Medical Ethics and Law 2006-8. If I had not taken up my current post, I would now be Director of PEAK. I can honestly say that PEAK are the finest group of colleagues I have ever worked with. I was struck immediately and continually by the extremely high quality of the teaching, and how valuable the students found the courses. PEAK has carved out a distinctive niche in teaching ethics to full-time professionals. This is a market which can only be expected to grow over the future, and I notice that the university's own projections have PEAK returning to profitability in the near future.
PEAK is a small unit, but it punches well above its weight in research. To give you the briefest summary of some its esteem indicators: PEAK currently has two prestigious Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellows in Biomedical Ethics; in 2010 it played host to a Leverhulme Visiting Professor, and in 2011-12 a Marie Curie Fellow. Its members edit two international journals (Public Health Ethics, and Research Ethics); it recently completed the EU's Textbook for Research Ethics; Angus Dawson is Vice-President of the International Association of Bioethics.
In short, PEAK is one of the best brands Keele University has. You cannot afford to let it close.
Yours sincerely
James Wilson
--
Dr James Wilson
Lecturer in Philosophy and Health
University College London
Lisa A. Eckenwiler
I was shocked and saddened to learn of the proposal to close PEAK at your university. I have been working professionally in philosophy/bioethics for just over ten years and in this time, have come to hold PEAK in great regard. Although I am based in the US, I am well aware of PEAK's outstanding reputation through my interactions with its faculty and some of its outstanding students. Two members of the faculty, Professors Angus Dawson and David Hunter, are among my most cherished colleagues given the excellence of their work and the quality of their characters.
My plea to keep PEAK open is, above all, motivated by the ongoing and, indeed, urgent need for education and training in ethics. With contemporary advances in medicine and technology, humanitarian health crises, and the evolving global landscape of research involving humans -- to name just a few things -- the need for institutions like PEAK is more pressing than ever. I sincerely hope that the university will take the long view in this time of financial strain and uphold its commitment to PEAK. We can ill afford its loss.
Sincerely yours,
Lisa Eckenwiler
Lisa A. Eckenwiler, PhD
Associate Professor
Department of Philosophy
Department of Health Administration and Policy
Director of Health Care Ethics
Center for Health Policy Research and Ethics
George Mason University
Samantha Griffin
I am currently a PhD student in the Centre for Professional Ethics. One of the important factors in my coming to study at Keele was the status of PEAK as a highly influential centre of bioethics research. PEAK’s position as such as establishment in a central location was also a significant factor. I have also worked in and around higher education for ten years – and am very aware of the current funding crisis.
I am deeply concerned by proposals to close the Centre, as I am by proposals to close the philosophy programme. The University, rather than being a place of scholarship and learning, appears to now consider itself as a popular degrees machine. I am extremely disappointed by the low value (as opposed to the simple price) that the University seems to place on these areas of scholarship. The skills obtained from these courses of study may not be those that lend themselves to immediate financial reward, but in terms of the development of the individual, and of critical thought as a foundation for academic advancement, they are unparalleled.
The University also seems to have made a fundamental error in considering that ethics should not be a separate area to law – the two are not the same. Although both disciplines are strengthened by the association, Bioethics in particular operates in an area where it needs to be in association with, but often in advance of, the law. By claiming that some of the Centre’s responsibilities will be taken up by Law is worrying because the distinctiveness of the Centre’s work collapses. There is also no indication of what areas will be considered worth retaining.
I would also suggest that in a University with a medical school, the loss of a centre such as PEAK removes the opportunities for collaboration or future recruitment to courses. I am alarmed at the lack of consideration that appears to have been given to consultation with the Centre and the Philosophy programme to examine routes to further income generation opportunities, particularly with the advent of higher fees.
I have received reassurances that I will be able to finish my programme at Keele, and receive the ‘positive student experience’. About this I have serious reservations. Firstly, a demoralised staff cannot deliver effective support and teaching. Secondly, cuts to the department may threaten access to appropriate supervision. Thirdly, a significant amount of my positive student experience is based on identifying with the aims and research of my department. I have seldom found such a positive environment as that which exists in PEAK. Finally, despite my respect and admiration for my law specialist colleagues, I consider myself as a bioethicist. It was that expertise that brought me here, not the discipline of Law.
Yours sincerely
Samantha Griffin, MSc.
Joanne Gordon
I was awarded a Clinical Fellowship in Biomedical Ethics from the Wellcome Trust in 2010 to conduct postgraduate research at the Centre for Professional Ethics (PEAK). As part of my application, external peer reviews of my research proposal were sought from national and international experts. They all described Keele as an ideal location for bioethical work and indeed commented on the respect and esteem with which the department’s research output and staff are held generally. As you may well know, two of the four fellowships which have been awarded since the Wellcome scheme started in 2009 have been to this institution, a remarkable achievement. I therefore have no doubt that PEAK played a major part in the success of my application and would benefit from such funding in the future. We all understand the need to make hard decisions in tough times. However, short-term gains have to be balanced against long-term goals and the decision-making process be as fair and transparent as possible.
As other people have said, the closure of PEAK could irrevocably damage the university’s reputation and I would hasten to add also eradicate a fantastic potential source of revenue in future years. As a doctor in the NHS, I am aware of a great need and desire amongst my colleagues for good quality training courses which can contribute to CPD (Continuing Professional Development). The current annual appraisal system and the introduction of revalidation next year means that staff are always on the lookout for interesting courses to attend. This is a relatively untapped market that PEAK is in a very fortuitous position to pursue.
I urge you to firstly, open dialogue with the relevant staff to determine if a less drastic resolution can be identified and secondly, take a long-range perspective and recognise the potential that PEAK offers both intellectually and financially.
Many Thanks
Dr Joanne Gordon (Wellcome Trust Clinical Fellow)
Bob Brecher
I have just heard of the proposal that both PEAK and philosophy more generally be closed down at Keele. As an erstwhile external examiner at PEAK, as well as working in the field more widely, to say that I am incredulous would be an understatement. The work of PEAK in health, medical and related ethics is without question the best in the United Kingdom, and enjoys a well-deserved international reputation both for its intellectual quality and its engagement with constituencies outside academe. Its impact, in short, is as outstanding as it is undeniable.
Were the University of Keele to decide that this work should cease, therefore, it would be a blow not only against ethics, but also to the standing and prestige of the University itself. I would respectfully ask the the University does not proceed with this proposal.
Yours sincerely
Bob Brecher
Professor of Moral Philosophy
Director, Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics & Ethics
University of Brighton
Ruth Stirton
At a national level, PEAK is a leader in ethics education for professionals – for example, a significant number of NHS Research Ethics Committee members are graduates of a PEAK training course. This grounding in ethics is fundamental to the success of the NHS Research Ethics Service in the UK. Having attended one of these courses at the beginning of my involvement in research ethics, I can vouch for their excellence.
Whilst there is no doubt that the current economic climate makes the business of running a university extremely difficult, axing a unit with such high impact and such good quality research output seems to be shortsighted folly. As a researcher who has been privileged to work with members of PEAK for some years, and hopes to be able to for many more, I would urge you to reconsider the closure of such an important centre of bioethical research."
Adam Golberg
I am writing as a Keele Philosophy graduate twice over (BA 1998, MPhil Political Philosophy 2003) and as a former member of staff in PEAK from 2001-2005, as Administrator/Centre Manager. I was absolutely astonished to read of plans to close the Centre for Professional Ethics, and I am writing to ask that you reconsider this decision.
I still work in the HE field (my current role is Business Development Executive at Nottingham University Business School), and so I know how tough times are in our sector. But when I left Keele to come to Nottingham in 2009, Keele's strategy appeared to be to find niche areas of particular distinctiveness and strength that Keele could find, exploit, and take on a world-leading role. PEAK was held up as an example of this - a suite of highly-rated and distinctive Masters courses, a unique doctoral programme, and a highly-successful programme of knowledge transfer and entrepreneurial enterprise activities that was the subject of a HEFCE good practice case study. All this in spite of very little support from the university.
PEAK does tremendously important and valuable work. I have seen at first hand the transformative and empowering effect that the courses have on students - taking brilliant people and making them even more brilliant, giving them a new string to their bow which is of immense value to their employers, their colleagues, the NHS, and ultimately patients. Research Ethics Committees at NHS trusts and universities all over UK and Ireland are full of members trained by Keele staff. The impact and value of this is immense - we rely upon these people to allow good research, while safeguarding the safety and dignity of research participants.
You and I both know that none of this pays the bills. However, It is very disappointing that - yet again - Keele appears to be going down the road of closures, job losses, and cuts driven by central management, without any kind of involvement or consultation with those at the sharp end. If PEAK costs or income has become an issue, then why no informal discussions? Why is a Senate paper the first anyone outside Keele Hall hears about it? Why no requests for business plans? Why go straight to closure? Why are those whose vision and energy have built up PEAK from a small sideline of the old Department of Philosophy not to be given a chance to move it on to the next stage in its development?
I hope that you will reconsider, and that common sense will prevail.
Best wishes
Adam Golberg
Iain Brassington
Professor Foskett –
I am writing to you to add my voice to the protest against the proposed closure of the philosophy programme and the Centre for Professional Ethics. The proposal is short-sighted at misguided in the extreme.
Philosophy, the discipline that more than any other represents the highest ideals of free enquiry, is and ought to be at the core of the academic enterprise. That an established university such as Keele has seen to remove its philosophy programme is a disaster not just for the staff and students involved, but for the very ability of Keele to represent the ideal of the university.
The Centre for Professional Ethics is an academic gem, punching well above its weight, and any half-sane university would do everything it could to keep it going. Indeed, the Centre has a very high international prestige in its own right, quite independently from Keele; it is strange that the university has seen fit to jettison this obvious asset. The Centre boasts an absurdly high concentration of talent, with world-standard researchers in reproductive ethics, public health ethics, and research ethics (to name just three fields). Its web of alumni and former staff demonstrates just how successful it has been over the years at attracting and honing talent, and sending it back out in to the world.
While I appreciate that there are currently problems facing both the philosophy programme and the CPE, these seem – based on documentation that is currently being widely circulated – to be largely attributable to mismanagement at the university level, and to the predictable effects of the recession. The problems are hardly unique, hardly incurable, and hardly grounds to close academic departments.
I urge you not to go ahead with the proposals.
Sincerely
Iain Brassington
CSEP/ iSEI/ School of Law
University of Manchester
John Rogers
Professor G.A.J. Rogers
Editor
British Journal for the History of Philosophy
Philosophy
SPIRE
Keele University
Keele
Staffs ST5 5BG
UK
Ruth Cain
As a former staff member of the Law School at Keele, where I spent a very happy three years working alongside PEAK staff, I am horrified and incredulous to hear of the proposed closure of what is universally acknowledged (except, it appears, by University accountants and management) to be an outstanding and indispensable research and teaching centre.
While working with colleagues at PEAK, I witnessed highly research-active and committed staff working long hours to deliver teaching programmes of outstanding quality, which were appreciated as such by the often professionally-qualified students on the programme. The research contribution of staff at PEAK is acknowledged by other academics in the field to be outstanding, which makes it even harder to understand why they were omitted from the RAE at last submission date. My incredulity at the proposed closure increased on reading the University's report to the Senate outlining reasons for the proposed closure. Even if the dubious financial predictions for PEAK are accepted, it is clear that PEAK will in fact shortly cover its costs! This is according to a calculation which (bizarrely) fails to include the £750,000 of research income generated by PEAK staff.
The University clearly has many questions to answer regarding this proposed closure. Why has the University (as outlined in a previous letter sent to you by Nafsika Athanassoulis) failed to account properly for the contributions made by PEAK to university income in previous years? Why has PEAK been selected for closure when other departments in similar financial situations have simply been asked to 'cut costs'? Why did the University fail to consult with its own staff before abruptly presenting these plans to the Senate?How can any University which places any value at all upon the intellectual contribution made by its own staff justify these plans? The current financial environment is not a sufficient excuse for the destruction of an outstanding research centre such as this; nor are the disadvantages accrued to it by a backlog of poor managerial and accounting practices, which have concealed its actual, significant contribution to the intellectual and indeed financial resources of the University.
The University of Keele wil impoverish itself in many ways if this closure goes ahead: economically, intellectually and in terms of staff and student morale. The current financial climate requires a just, careful and prudent response to the difficulties faced by UK higher education. Respected universities such as Keele have a duty to protect their best scholars, and their students, from brutal and ill-thought-out closures such as this. I hope that the plans to close PEAK, justly described as one of the gems of Keele, will be reconsidered and that the University will enter into open and democratic discussions regarding fairer and more sensible ways to distribute the burden of the current budget constraints.
Yours sincerely
Dr. Ruth Cain
Lecturer in Law
Kent Law School
Ambreena Manji
Rodney D Gilbert
Of course I recognise that the University, like all institutions, is feeling the effects of the governments financial cutbacks and the recession in general. However, I think that PEAK is one of the jewels in the Keele crown and the world will be a poorer place without it.
Yours sincerely
Rodney D Gilbert MMed(Paed), FRCPCH
Consultant Paediatric Nephrologist, Southampton General Hospital
Honorary Senior Lecturer, University of Southampton