Terry Brotherstone (Letters, 21 August) says that my argument for 鈥渘o鈥 in the 18 September Scottish referendum (鈥Visions of independence鈥, Features, 14聽August) did not address the 鈥渄emocratic deficit鈥 in Scottish universities. It didn鈥檛 because Scotland doesn鈥檛 need independence to sort it out; the current devolved Scottish government can do whatever it likes with higher education. And I looked in聽vain for a mention of the von Prondzynski review in the White Paper.
But to base future developments on the 鈥渉istoric distinctiveness鈥 of Scottish higher education, as Brotherstone suggests, would be bad for academic freedom. Historically, Scottish universities were seen as emanations of the state, and government intervention was the order of the day, far more so than in England. The 1858 Universities (Scotland) Act gave sweeping powers to government-appointed commissioners over the curriculum and severely diminished the power of academics in management. They haven鈥檛 got it back聽yet.
Hugh Pennington
Emeritus professor of bacteriology
University of Aberdeen
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