糖心Vlog

Libert茅, egalit茅, autonomie: Do French universities want more freedom?

Despite incremental reforms throughout Emmanuel Macron鈥檚 first term as president, France still has one of the most centralised higher education systems in Europe. As the election looms, Ben Upton examines attitudes towards institutional autonomy and asks whether its supposed effects on equality and academic freedom are limiting appetite for more

Published on
March 31, 2022
Last updated
April 6, 2022
Source: Getty

Higher education institutions in France have more control over their affairs than at any time in their history. A series of reforms in the past two decades has granted them ever greater discretion over their own governance, staffing and admissions.

But they are still only 鈥渉alfway鈥 through their transformation, President Emmanuel Macron told an audience of university leaders in January. If re-elected in April, he has promised even more powers for university leaders, further tempering a statist higher education ideal that has existed since the revolution. And polls suggest that Macron will be offered the chance to follow through: over the past six months, he has sat comfortably ahead of rivals, despite only recently having declared his formal candidacy.

鈥淭he main idea is to give more autonomy, but with some limits,鈥 says Fr茅d茅ric Forest, a senior civil servant in the French higher education ministry and a researcher at the Universit茅 de Paris.

A notable example is the 2018 decree loosening the rules under which institutions elect their presidents, such that candidates no longer need to be faculty members. 鈥淚t opens up quite a lot of possibility in terms of how to organise higher education institutions,鈥 says Christine Musselin, a CNRS research professor at the Sciences Po Centre for the Sociology of Organisations. She says the freedom to elect external leadership candidates has already been exercised by several universities, as well as by聽grandes 茅肠辞濒别蝉, France鈥檚 smaller, selective higher education institutions focused on the professions.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

University autonomy had already been increasing prior to Macron, under governments of both the Left and the Right. But it hasn鈥檛 always been embraced by institutions. One of Macron鈥檚 presidential opponents happens to be Val茅rie P茅cresse, the minister for higher education under the centre-right government of Nicolas Sarkozy. In 2007, she oversaw a major reform that beefed up the role of presidents in university governance, handed institutions control of their salary budgets and allowed them to set up charitable foundations to top up staff salaries. However, a 2021 study by France鈥檚 Court of Auditors found that institutions had made scant use of these powers, with only 鈧17.6 million raised by salary-supplementing foundations over聽10 years.

鈥淲hen you ask [universities], they say they want autonomy,鈥 says Manuel Tunon de Lara, who heads the university presidents鈥 conference, France Universities. 鈥淏ut when you look at the facts and the manner in which they are organised, they demonstrate that they can鈥檛 always assume autonomy. In some universities, they have their community 鈥 students, professors in some disciplines 鈥 [who] are not convinced autonomy is a good approach.鈥

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

For Musselin, the 鈥渧ery specific history鈥 of the French higher education system, which has 鈥渁lways been part of the action of the state鈥, helps explain why the appetite for autonomy has been patchy. After the revolution of 1789, the medieval universities that stood in France鈥檚 major cities were disrupted or disbanded entirely. In the following years, political energy went instead into establishing grandes 茅肠辞濒别蝉. These were modelled on the Paris School of Mines (now known as Mines ParisTech and part of Paris Sciences et Lettres 鈥 PSL Research University Paris), which was founded before the revolution in 1783 to prepare engineers for the mining industry. 鈥淭hey developed an idea of higher education that should be really in service of society and should train people that would be able to develop the economy of France,鈥 says Musselin.

In the following decades, Napoleon kept university faculties under the tight control of a national academic board in Paris, which strictly defined their curricula. 鈥淵ou have this kind of discipline-based management of the French university system, which you can find until [the mass student protests of] 1968,鈥 Musselin says.

French President Emmanuel Macron visits a campus in Paris
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Getty

Another of Macron鈥檚 presidential rivals, the left-winger Jean-Luc M茅lenchon, 鈥渨ants to go back to the Napoleonic university鈥, says Andr茅e Sursock, a senior adviser to the European University Association. M茅lenchon鈥檚 election manifesto seeks to 鈥渙pen a debate鈥 about restoring the National Council of Universities鈥 responsibility for 鈥渃ertification鈥, a pre-recruitment process currently carried out by institutions.

But Karin Fischer, a professor of Irish and British studies at the University of Orl茅ans who helped develop M茅lenchon鈥檚 higher education plans, denies that this will lead to 鈥渁 horrible new, purely national system鈥. Instead, it will address the fact that the current split of responsibilities between hiring institutions and the state leaves candidates vulnerable to local nepotism. 鈥淭here鈥檚 so many drawbacks with the system now. We just want to explore ways of making it actually streamlined and possibly more efficient,鈥 she says.

M茅lenchon trails his centrist and right-wing rivals in the polls, but those sceptical of devolving decision-making to institutions can find other attractions in his programme, such as the dismantling of the Parcoursup, an algorithmic system introduced by Macron in 2018, which steers French school-leavers towards a suitable university course.

鈥淭he possibility has been given for universities to 鈥榦rient鈥 the students; I shouldn鈥檛 say 鈥榮elect鈥 because it鈥檚 not a selection process,鈥 says Musselin. Nevertheless, she says, many see it as a selection process and oppose it on that basis, despite its boosting completion rates for first-year undergraduates from 40 to 47.5 per cent in its inaugural year.

Admissions are often considered a key part of autonomy. But while grandes 茅肠辞濒别蝉 have always been highly selective, France has historically prided itself on not permitting its universities to select. And while that odd dichotomy has endured for many decades, the gilets jaunes protests of 2018 and 2019 highlighted that fair access remains a very touchy subject in French society. The protests resulted in Macron pledging to abolish his own alma mater, the 脡cole Nationale d鈥橝dministration, the grande 茅cole known for churning out France鈥檚 political and business elites.

Meanwhile, Macron was forced to clarify his remarks in the current election campaign that France cannot have higher education with 鈥渘o price鈥 for 鈥渁lmost all鈥 students. This prompted weeks of worried speculation about tuition fees, before Macron clarified that he 鈥渘ever said鈥 he would introduce or increase them. 鈥淗e tested the water, but the water was cold,鈥 says Musselin.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

Academics themselves are also very lukewarm regarding institutional autonomy. Indeed, many see it as being in opposition to their personal autonomy. Academics 鈥渄on鈥檛 say 鈥業鈥檓 anti-autonomy鈥: they say 鈥業鈥檓 for the autonomy of the academic profession鈥, which is quite different,鈥 says Musselin. They regard their status as public servants as a guarantee of their academic freedom, she adds.

This dynamic suppresses French academics鈥 identification with their home institutions, says the EUA鈥檚 Sursock, noting that academics in Paris 鈥渃hange from one organisation to another very easily鈥. For academics elsewhere, the state is a pleasingly distant master: 鈥淚t鈥檚 much more comfortable for you as a staff member if you鈥檙e being managed from some central point in Paris, far away,鈥 says Sursock. France鈥檚 history of siloed, faculty-based central management also dilutes institutional identity, Sursock adds; French academics 鈥渨ill certainly identify more strongly with their discipline鈥.

Worries about institutional autonomy tend to be strongest in the social sciences and humanities, according to both Musselin and Tunon de Lara. 鈥淭hey feel that the structures and the kind of governance people are trained to introduce come from the sciences and are imposed on them with this perspective of the sciences,鈥 says Musselin. A distrusted metric-based management approach is frequently聽seen as part and parcel of the聽recent reforms that have enhanced the power of institutional presidents.

There are also concerns about the financial implications of institutional autonomy. 鈥淚f it ultimately resulted in a financial withdrawal from the state, it would force universities to increase their own resources,鈥 says Emmanuelle Garnier, president of the University of Toulouse Jean Jaur猫s, which specialises in the humanities. But while institutions that are strong in areas with obvious economic benefit are able to win project funding from the National Research Agency or the European Union, 鈥渢he humanities cannot鈥, Garnier says.

鈥淲hen you hear the word 鈥榓utonomy鈥, it sounds like a good thing, but the idea that the autonomy should be that of the head of the university is completely different from the notion of individual academic freedom,鈥 agrees Orl茅ans鈥 Fischer. For her, the 2007 reform was a watershed. 鈥淭he moment the university president has the power over what you might research, what you might teach, your academic freedom is bound to be constrained,鈥 she says.

Aside from changing relationships, that reform altered the make-up of institutions. Previously, university heads had always been faculty members with skeleton teams. But acquiring responsibility for paying staff tripled institutional budgets, resulting in the multiplication and professionalisation of administrative staff, says Sursock. 鈥淧ractically all the universities have now in the president鈥檚 office a chief of staff. That鈥檚 a major, major change,鈥 she says, adding that a general lack of support staff partly explains why progress towards institutional autonomy has been so slow in France.

Sculptures waiting for installation on dome of Val-de-Grace church
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Getty

At the same time, other reforms have bolstered the role of the president. The greater use of competitive, excellence-focused funding since the mid-2000s has brought France closer to systems like the UK鈥檚 and Germany鈥檚, where the state has a smaller rulebook but pulls strings with financial incentives. And in 2010, the IdEx excellence initiative began to hand out billions of euros to encourage France鈥檚 best universities into strategic, research-focused mergers with international ambitions. The final list of universities approved for ongoing funding boosts was announced in March.听

Sursock helped to develop the IdEx programme. In her view, its two-level approach, which also allows for recognition of universities with strengths in specific areas, encourages a 鈥渕uch more distributed definition of excellence鈥 than similar initiatives elsewhere do. She adds that, like competitive funding, it boosts autonomy by encouraging universities to think strategically. As a result, she is 鈥渟eeing many more concerns about succession planning, because now that the presidents embody a strategic project, they want to see it continue. They are grooming their successors.鈥

Some academics are worried that France is moving towards an 鈥渁ggressive liberal鈥 system, prioritising competition over fair geographical and disciplinary provision. 鈥淲ith these instruments, the government stated that French universities are not equal, that some of them will succeed in the competition and others will not,鈥 says Musselin.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

The 鈥University of Toulouse鈥 鈥 a grouping consisting of Jean Jaur猫s and two other local universities 鈥 has had its application for IdEx designation 聽because of聽a perceived lack of local buy-in. For Jean Jaur猫s鈥 Garnier, autonomy 鈥渞aises questions of adaptation: knowing how to grasp the issues in a much broader way than before, knowing how to devise and implement strategies on a new scale鈥.

Among the institutions granted a share of the annual IdEx funding is PSL Paris. An amalgam of 11 grandes 茅肠辞濒别蝉 and public institutions in an arrangement known as a聽grand 茅tablissement, PSL formally became a university in 2019 and is, by some distance, France鈥檚 highest-ranked institution in 糖心Vlog鈥檚 World University Rankings, at joint 40th.

But autonomy within grands 茅tablissements聽is an issue for the often historically prestigious institutions that make them up. Alain Fuchs was first elected president of PSL in 2017, when it was a more loosely bound conglomeration known as a ComUE, a legal form created in 2013. He says the biggest challenge in merging into a university was deciding what powers the institutions would pool. 鈥淭he most difficult part was to devise this line of separation, or this balance between integration and subsidiarity,鈥 he says.

As vice-president of research at prestigious social sciences grande 茅cole Sciences Po, Musselin took part in regular meetings with her seven counterparts within the ComUE known as the Sorbonne Paris Cit茅 Alliance. She says the grouping did nothing to enhance autonomy or efficiency. 鈥淪itting there, I was thinking, who is my manager? Who am I responsible to? To the ComUE or to my own president?鈥 she says.

In Fuchs鈥 view, however, PSL鈥檚 merger into a single university has 鈥渋n a sense鈥 enhanced member institutions鈥 individual autonomy. 鈥淭he whole point is the relationship with the Ministry of 糖心Vlog,鈥 he says, explaining that, as an interface, he can insulate the heads of PSL鈥檚 constituent schools from ministry meddling. The officials 鈥渄o the micromanagement with me鈥, he says.

PSL tops 罢贬贰鈥檚 Young University Rankings 2022 and Fuchs says that such international recognition has also helped to grant the institution a kind of intangible autonomy from the state. 鈥淧SL now is really part of the landscape and understood. That provided us, and me, room to talk to the administration and to the ministries,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ecause of the increasing visibility of PSL, my feeling is that I have a little bit more autonomy now than I had five years ago.鈥

But, like most university presidents, Fuchs wants even more. PSL is among those institutions that have set up a foundation they can use to top up salaries. This allows it to put together more enticing offers than universities are usually able to, so as to lure foreign talent. But Fuchs would like more latitude in hiring and considers the current situation an uneasy halfway house. 鈥淗uman resource management is the main point,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very French, the half-pregnant concept: starting a reform and ending up in the middle of the road. Either you obtain autonomy or not.鈥

Mural based on Delacroix鈥檚 painting 鈥淟iberty Leading the People鈥
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
Getty

Perhaps Macron himself agrees with this sentiment. In January, he said France 鈥渕ust complete the logic鈥 of autonomy reforms, allowing more differentiation between institutions. International trends may also push France in the same direction; within Europe, Ireland, Slovakia and Spain are all developing autonomy-related reforms, according to Enora Pruvot, deputy director for governance, funding and public policy development at the EUA, who is currently collecting data for the latest edition of the association鈥檚 autonomy scorecard.

The latest French data, covering the winter of 2021-22, were still being collated at the time of writing, but in of the scorecard, the country has languished near the bottom of the four criteria against which systems are ranked. It was in the bottom three for academic and staffing autonomy, the bottom five for financial autonomy, and the bottom third for organisational autonomy.

That uniformly low position distinguishes France from other European systems. Sweden, for instance, has moderate levels of autonomy in most areas, but is one of the freest systems when it comes to staffing. 鈥淭he regulatory framework in France remains quite restrictive in all aspects,鈥 says Pruvot. While the rules have been loosened in 鈥渟ome very targeted areas鈥, what is missing is a 鈥渃oherent approach鈥 to autonomy, with funding and skills being in particular need of reduced ministerial oversight.

Among those targeted tweaks was 2018鈥檚 announcement of a huge rise in the fee cap for international students 鈥 from about 鈧170 (拢140) a year to 鈧2,770 at bachelor鈥檚 level and 鈧3,770 at master鈥檚 level. However, while the fees were billed as part of an effort to increase the prestige of French institutions and double international enrolments within a decade, 鈥渋t鈥檚 difficult for some of the French universities to be competitive internationally if they start charging higher fees, because what鈥檚 missing is an upstream investment in improving the international student experience,鈥 Pruvot warns.

The pursuit of prestige is also at the root of a recent legal fight over the right to use the name 鈥Universit茅 de Paris鈥, the historic bearer of which was broken up into multiple institutions following the 1968 protests. At the end of last year, the Council of State, France鈥檚 supreme court, ruled that the latest claimant on the name, formed by the 2019 merger of two of the splinter institutions, the universities of Paris-Descartes and Paris-Diderot, must call itself something else, following a challenge by a third splinter institution, the University of Paris-Panth茅on-Assas. The Udice group of 10 major French research universities, many of which are involved in the IdEx initiative and which includes the 2019 Universit茅 de Paris, said the spat had taken France 鈥渂ack 15 years鈥 and would have a 鈥渄eleterious international effect on all the French actors鈥.

鈥淵ou have this kind of millefeuille of identities and entities competing in terms of branding. It鈥檚 difficult,鈥 says Pruvot.

Whatever the latest data show, Pruvot acknowledges that the EUA鈥檚 methodology 鈥渋s probably going to be a bit unfair to France as the scorecard methodology will not capture these contextual developments鈥. Instead,聽it focuses on 鈥渢he contractual relationship between the state and the institution鈥. But in interviews with the Montaigne Institute thinktank following the first Covid-19 lockdown,聽French university leaders all claimed to have gained autonomy as a result of their often ad hoc responses to the pandemic. Musselin agrees that while university presidents were brought聽closer to the ministry during聽the rewriting of rules to allow for digital teaching and exams at the start of the crisis, they settled into a looser relationship as the months wore on. 鈥淢ost [presidents] took more distance from the ministry than they had before,鈥 she says.

Where some see presidential autonomy behind institutions鈥 ability to adapt to unprecedented conditions, others credit collective decision-making. 鈥淭he kind of agility we would associate with the notion of autonomy [is also something] you can have via university democracy, the possibility of decision-making on the ground,鈥 says Orl茅ans鈥 Fischer.听Yet the trend towards greater institutional autonomy seems likely to continue. Aside from international trends, France鈥檚 own demographic changes invite it, as a baby boom combines with an increasingly mixed student body.

The Court of Auditors鈥 study notes that French enrolments have grown by 9.6 per cent in the past five years, equivalent to聽10 medium-sized universities. Amid such expansion, 鈥測ou cannot have a very unified, single system with so many students and so many staff鈥, says Musselin. As part of this evolution, she foresees institutions acquiring more autonomy over staffing and recruitment. 鈥淭hat will not be a big bang, but, rather, going a step further on small things that, at the end of the day, make quite a big difference,鈥 she says.

Neither does Sursock foresee a revolution. She notes that for all France鈥檚 commitment to equality in its university sector, an increasingly diverse student population 鈥渨ill need very diverse institutions, and the state is unable to [provide] that鈥. For her, the next logical step for reform will be university governance, moving towards leaner boards better able to make bold decisions. However, she concedes that downsizing boards that often have 30 members or more will be 鈥渃hallenging鈥; institutions will 鈥渘eed to be encouraged to come up with alternative experimentations in this鈥.

Ultimately, for Sursock, the culture of universities cannot be separated from that of their wider societies. 鈥淭he way they are run is very often a reflection of the way the country is run,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to change that. It鈥檚 difficult to change your political culture.鈥

So while the outcome of April鈥檚 presidential election is unlikely to divert France from its creep towards liberalisation of higher education, don鈥檛 expect the political tethers to be guillotined any time soon.

糖心Vlog

ADVERTISEMENT

ben.upton@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT