糖心Vlog

What might independence mean for Scotland's universities?

Whatever the result of the referendum, the impact on Scottish higher education will be considerable. David Matthews talks to advocates for both sides

Published on
June 12, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Source: Paul Bateman

The government in an independent Scotland would be highly supportive of universities but would also want 鈥榗learer state control鈥 to pursue economic objectives

This September, Scottish voters could make a historic decision to leave the UK. But what would that mean for higher education north of the border?

For four Scottish universities 鈥 St Andrews, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh 鈥 life in an independent Scotland would represent a return to their historical roots, as all were founded well before the union with England. The oldest, the University of St Andrews (founded around 1413), had already stood for almost 300 years before the 1707 Acts of Union: almost as much time as has elapsed since.

But times are obviously very different now, and although the immediate questions for higher education that would arise from a 鈥測es鈥 vote on 18 September have received plenty of attention (see 鈥楤urning issues: tuition fees and research council funds鈥 box below), how the Scottish academy would look 10 or 20 years down the line 鈥 the blink of an eye for some institutions 鈥 has been less discussed.

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There is excitement among some scholars north of the border about what universities could achieve in an independent Scotland. Yet fear stalks the debate as well, with advocates for both sides worried that they could be academically blacklisted for speaking out, and some pro-union scholars recounting tales of vicious online attacks for coming out against independence.

One man not afraid to speak out in favour of independence is Willy Maley, professor of Renaissance studies at the University of Glasgow. For him, secession from the UK would offer a chance for Scottish universities to break free of the 鈥渃orporate ethos鈥 that he believes has wormed its way into higher education.

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A 鈥渢arget-driven, management-controlled model has been imposed across the UK鈥, he says. But independence could bring about a 鈥渕uch more devolved university system where academics have more power鈥.

In 2012, a committee commissioned by the Scottish government and chaired by Ferdinand von Prondzynski, principal of Aberdeen鈥檚 Robert Gordon University, set out a series of . These included the election of governing body chairs by students and staff; the presence on boards of at least two representatives elected by staff; a requirement for governing bodies, over time, to become at least 40 per cent female; and the freezing of principals鈥 pay until remuneration processes have been reviewed.

Maley (who, like everyone 糖心Vlog spoke to for this article, stresses that he is speaking in a personal capacity) points to these proposals as an indication of the 鈥渘ew ethos鈥 that might prevail in the academy of an independent Scotland. The Scottish education secretary, Michael Russell, tells THE that he is 鈥渟till committed鈥 to implementing the report in its 鈥渇ull form鈥, although he acknowledges that he could do so under Scotland鈥檚 existing devolved powers (see 鈥楻esponsibility: the current system鈥 box below).

Russell also believes that Scotland鈥檚 new, post-independence constitution should enshrine the Scottish National Party鈥檚 policy of free higher education for all students domiciled in Scotland on the grounds that 鈥渆ducation is a social and an individual good鈥 that is 鈥渃entral to our view of ourselves [as] a thinking nation鈥.

Von Prondzynski also hopes that a 鈥測es鈥 vote might spur a cultural shift in Scottish universities, allowing them to diverge further from their English cousins and 鈥渂ecome places where intellectual objectives should be foremost鈥.

鈥淚n some ways, England has been a distorting influence on that [objective] of late,鈥 he says, pointing to the decision of many English universities to charge the maximum 拢9,000 annual tuition fee. Of course, many Scottish universities also opted to charge that maximum to UK students domiciled outside Scotland 鈥 in order, von Prondzynski says, to make a 鈥渜uality statement鈥 to prospective students. He regards this, however, as a 鈥渂izarre鈥 symptom of the current culture in universities that an independent Scotland could move away from. 鈥淣obody should be thinking in those terms,鈥 he argues.

But would independence really herald, as Maley puts it, a 鈥減rocess of democratisation from the ground up鈥 in Scottish universities, and a rolling back of the power of managers?

Murray Pittock, Bradley professor of English literature at the University of Glasgow, is one of the leaders of the pro-independence group Academics for Yes, but he is sceptical. The government in an independent Scotland would be highly supportive of universities but would also want 鈥渃learer state control鈥 to pursue economic objectives, rather than adopting England鈥檚 market-based approach, he says.

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鈥淭he more that governance is academic-led, the more it tends to look towards internal stakeholders [rather] than external stakeholders,鈥 he points out, meaning that the government 鈥 a 鈥渓oving but invasive鈥 external stakeholder 鈥 would be reluctant to hand over power to scholars.

Meanwhile, Richard J. Williams, professor of contemporary visual cultures at the University of Edinburgh, dismisses Maley鈥檚 hope that independence would bring in more power for academics as a 鈥渃omplete fantasy鈥.

He says the fact that his institution has 鈥渄one extremely well over the past few years鈥 is largely down to a governance reform process that abolished faculties and departments and created much larger colleges and schools that, in his view, put more power in the hands of senior managers. Universities have become so complex and have so much money flowing through them that there is 鈥渘o way academics are in a position to manage these things鈥, he adds.

Williams also worries about 鈥渢he extent to which the Scottish government wants to make things distinctively culturally Scottish over the next 10 to 20 years鈥. He says that what he understands to be a 鈥渟erious proposal鈥 was recently submitted by several Scottish universities to a particular research council asking it to fund a two-week training course for all funded PhD students in Scotland on 鈥渢he values of the Scottish Enlightenment鈥. Although the proposal didn鈥檛 go ahead in the end, Williams found the episode 鈥渧ery troubling鈥.

He is also sceptical of what he sees as the 鈥渋nexorable鈥 rise of the use of Gaelic in Scottish universities. Four institutions have drawn up plans to preserve the language, with the University of Aberdeen using bilingual signs on campus and translating parts of its website. But Williams thinks this promotion of the language, which is spoken by just over 1 per cent of the Scottish population , is 鈥渁 way of making a symbolic and public difference [between Scotland and] the rest of the UK鈥 and 鈥渉as nothing to do with a living language at all鈥.

But Russell, the education secretary, dismisses such fears of a cultural agenda for Scotland鈥檚 universities as 鈥渁 very silly perspective鈥, describing the use of Gaelic in Scotland as 鈥渁 voluntary activity鈥.

Many 鈥測es鈥 supporters hope that an independent Scotland would become a higher-spending state and pour more money into universities.

Bryan MacGregor, head of the College of Physical Sciences at Aberdeen, argues that the new country 鈥渨ouldn鈥檛 have to devote resources to HS2 [the high-speed rail line to be built in England] or nuclear weapons鈥, and would give education 鈥渁 higher priority鈥 because of the 鈥済eneral cultural support鈥 that it commands in Scotland, as evidenced by the decision not to charge tuition fees.

Paul Bateman illustration (12 June 2014)

Many academics are reluctant to come down on one side or the other of the debate. [They] are 鈥榳orried there will be sanctions against them鈥 if they come out against independence

Support for that view is lent by First Minister Alex Salmond鈥檚 emotive preface to the government鈥檚 White Paper setting out the case for independence. In the first paragraph alone, he mentions Scotland鈥檚 鈥渦nrivalled commitment to the empowerment of education鈥 as well as the 鈥渂rilliance of our scholars鈥 and Scots鈥 鈥減assion and curiosity for invention鈥. Under his leadership, funding for higher education in Scotland has risen in cash terms by about 15 per cent since 2011-12 鈥 although this has come at the expense of funding for further education. In contrast, direct public support for teaching in English universities has fallen dramatically, replaced by higher tuition fees.

Russell wants to 鈥渃ontinue鈥 high levels of state support for higher education. He believes that England鈥檚 鈥渨ithdrawal鈥 from funding it was a 鈥渇oolish decision, not least because it hasn鈥檛 worked鈥 in terms of saving the government money.

But whether universities would be better funded in an independent Scotland also turns on the much bigger question of whether increased spending would be affordable. The that the new country would need to raise taxes or cut spending beyond the current UK austerity plans to make its public finances 鈥渟ustainable鈥. The says, however, that leaving the UK would allow Scotland to engage in 鈥渞esponsible borrowing to fund growth鈥.

As for research funding, something of a stalemate has been reached over whether Scottish universities would be able to remain part of the UK research council system after independence (see 鈥楤urning issues: tuition fees and research council funds鈥 box below). But supporters of independence are clear that, in the longer term, the government would take tighter control of Scotland鈥檚 research agenda.

鈥淚n a smaller system such as Scotland, you might find that research funding is much more focused on practical economic outputs,鈥 von Prondzynski says. Asked if this might compromise academic freedom, he responds that 鈥渁cademic freedom doesn鈥檛 imply that the government make significant funding available with no conditions attached鈥.

The Scottish government鈥檚 own document on post-independence research is vague, noting that a 鈥渇ull range of fiscal levers鈥 would be available to it to 鈥渆ncourage greater collaboration between universities and the private sector鈥, yet stressing its respect for 鈥渞esponsible autonomy鈥 in research.

If some areas of research were privileged in the name of economic growth (the White Paper mentions oil and gas, food and drink, life sciences and tourism as being particular Scottish strengths), others would be neglected, fears Susan Shaw, former vice-principal of the University of Strathclyde and a member of the pro-union Academics Together group. Scotland鈥檚 research trajectory would be similar to that of the Republic of Ireland, which, she says, is 鈥渘ot able to have large numbers of research areas and [has] no blue-skies research鈥.

She also warns that not having access to common UK institutions such as the Met Office, the British Antarctic Survey and the British Geological Survey would have a negative impact on Scottish research.

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Meanwhile, Jo Shaw, Salvesen chair of European institutions at the University of Edinburgh, says that although universities would adapt whatever the referendum result, in smaller states, relationships between universities and research funders can become a 鈥渂it cosy鈥, leading to a 鈥渟ort of corporatist approach鈥. She fears that researchers could end up asking themselves: 鈥淲hat would the Scottish Funding Council want me to do?鈥

Questions about European Union research funds make things even more complicated. With the United Kingdom Independence Party putting in a strong display at the recent European elections (garnering per cent of the vote and gaining an additional 11 MEPs) and the Conservatives promising a referendum on the UK鈥檚 EU membership in 2017, the SNP is now touting independence as the only way to ensure Scotland can continue to access EU research funding, which it says has yielded the country more than 鈧500 million (拢407 million) since 2007.

Conversely, independence could also put EU research funds at risk. In February, the president of the European Commission, Jos茅 Manuel Barroso, said that it would be 鈥渆xtremely difficult, if not impossible鈥 for an independent Scotland to join the EU.

Academics and universities have been busy trying to work through this tangled thicket of post-independence scenarios for higher education. One such project, 鈥溙切腣log in Scotland, the Devolution Settlement and the Referendum on Independence鈥, based at the University of Edinburgh, is due to report its findings in late June, and the University of Glasgow has held numerous events in the build-up to the referendum, one of which provided the platform for former UK prime minister Gordon Brown to set out his case for the union.

But many academics are reluctant to come down on one side or the other of the debate. One scholar, who does not want to be identified, says that academics are 鈥渨orried there will be sanctions against them鈥 if they come out against independence. She adds that a senior colleague who agrees 鈥150 per cent鈥 with the pro-union cause refuses to sign up publicly because he fears that he will be blocked from academic positions if Scotland votes for independence.

The prevalence of such fears was precisely what drew her into the 鈥渘o鈥 campaign, because she was 鈥渃oncerned that the voice of academics for 鈥榥o鈥 was not being heard鈥. But after coming out publicly against independence, she received online abuse, including one email that told her to 鈥済o back to England, you fucking whore鈥. This is because 鈥渆lements鈥 within the nationalist campaign regard pro-unionists as 鈥渦npatriotic鈥. Although she was born in England, she considered Scotland to be her 鈥渉ome鈥. But the abuse has led her to question that Scottish identity and made her feel 鈥渦ncomfortable, unwanted and worried鈥.

Another academic, who also does not want to be named, suffered abuse online from the pro-independence 鈥渃ybernats鈥 to the effect that, as a perceived Englishman living in Scotland, he was 鈥渘ot welcome鈥.

Although he has written about the referendum, the fear of being 鈥渏umped on鈥 by 鈥渧isceral, really nasty鈥 online abuse has put him off coming out publicly for the 鈥渘o鈥 side.

But a pro-independence scholar, who also prefers to remain anonymous, points out that the online abuse is dealt in both directions. He cites a newspaper survey conducted in March that found that 鈥測es鈥 supporters were more than twice as likely as 鈥渘o鈥 supporters to have been subjected to 鈥渢hreats or abuse鈥 online or in person. He also dismisses the idea that pro-union academics would be blackballed in an independent Scotland. Rather, he says, supporting independence has 鈥渘ot really done my career any good because the establishment and those who run universities are 鈥榥o鈥 [supporters]鈥. For this reason, he 鈥渢hought long and hard about coming out鈥.

Asked whether the independence debate among academics has been open, Russell says that it has been 鈥渞aging鈥 across campuses and notes that academics from both sides have been happy to put their names to debating the impact of independence on Scotland鈥檚 research base.

As institutions, however, Scottish universities have remained scrupulously neutral. Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen, for instance, hurriedly quit the CBI in April after the business body registered with the Electoral Commission as a pro-union backer.

Vice-chancellors have also stayed quiet and are largely unwilling, even off the record, to indicate how they will vote. The exception is von Prondzynski, but his 鈥測es鈥 will be motivated more by the fact that Scotland鈥檚 鈥渆thos and culture鈥as diverged from that of England鈥 than by any higher education concerns.

As Maley鈥檚 remarks illustrate, supporters of Scottish independence have some of the same concerns about being part of the UK as many academics do about the direction of their universities: the march of marketisation, a retreat from the ideals of free education and social democracy, and the sense that they are governed by a distant elite.

The question that the Scottish academy must grapple with is whether independence might bring about a viable new direction 鈥 or be just an exercise in nostalgic fantasy.

Paul Bateman illustration (12 June 2014)

Burning issues: tuition fees and research council funds

The debate around higher education and independence has focused on the two immediate issues that would be up for negotiation if Scotland voted to leave the UK: tuition fees and access to the UK research councils鈥 funds.

Currently, Scottish-domiciled students and European Union students from outside the UK are exempt from undergraduate tuition fees in Scotland, while those from England, Wales and Northern Ireland have to pay up to 拢9,000 a year. This is allowed under EU rules because member states are permitted to discriminate within their borders, and the Scottish National Party wants to continue this arrangement after independence.

But if Scotland became a separate member of the EU, legal scholars have suggested that it would have to exempt English, Welsh and Northern Irish undergraduates from fees as well, potentially sparking a flood of applications from them to Scottish universities. The SNP believes that this danger would enable it to convince the EU to preserve the current arrangements.

Meanwhile, Scottish universities currently win a disproportionately high share of research council funding, so continuing the current system after independence could be seen as a subsidy from the remainder of the UK to Scotland.

But the SNP argues that an independent Scotland and the rest of the UK would have a common interest in preserving that system because of Scottish leadership in certain disciplines.

International makeover: overseas students and the Scottish 鈥榖rand鈥

One of the carrots the Scottish National Party is dangling in front of Scottish universities in the event of independence is an end to the 鈥渪enophobic鈥 UK immigration regime and the reintroduction of post-study work visas.

The removal of such visas by the UK government in 2012, combined with harsh rhetoric on immigration, has been blamed for the first recorded fall in the number of non-EU international students in the UK in 2012-13.

International students may be especially important for Scottish universities over the next couple of decades. A Universities UK report, , has predicted that the number of Scottish 18- to 20-year-olds will shrink by 11 per cent between 2006 and 20, compared with a 2.4 per cent rise in England. But if Scotland gains control of its own immigration system, Michael Russell, the country鈥檚 education secretary, sees 鈥減otential鈥 for 鈥渕odest continuing growth鈥 in the number of international undergraduates.

Another benefit that universities would gain from independence, according to Murray Pittock, Bradley professor of English literature at the University of Glasgow, is that the Scottish government would be free to pursue its own foreign policy without the UK 鈥渃onfusing鈥 diplomatic relationships by pursuing a different agenda. Hence, the government in Edinburgh would be freer to promote Scottish universities abroad and to strike up partnerships.

But the lure of the British higher education brand to international students is strong. Last year, for instance, the UK was judged the third most attractive country for study behind the US and Canada by .

According to Steve Chapman, vice-chancellor of Heriot-Watt University, the buses on the university鈥檚 Dubai campus bear the slogan 鈥渆lite British education since 1821鈥. 鈥淚f it happens that the Scottish card helps, then I鈥檒l play the Scottish card鈥ut, in general, the default would be 鈥楤ritish education鈥,鈥 he says.

But if Scotland became independent, it is not clear that Heriot-Watt would have to stop calling itself 鈥淏ritish鈥, he adds, as it would still be located in 鈥渢he British Isles鈥.

Responsibility: the current system

Devolved issues

  • Teaching funding
    Distributed by the Scottish Funding Council. Scottish universities do not charge tuition fees for Scottish-domiciled undergraduates.
  • Widening participation
    The Scottish Funding Council requires universities to produce 鈥渙utcome agreements鈥, which can include recruitment targets for students from poor neighbourhoods.
  • Student complaints
    These are handled by the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman, which deals with the whole public sector. Unlike the Office of the Independent Adjudicator, which covers England and Wales, it names institutions involved in its judgements.

Mixed approach

  • Research funding
    About a third of research funding comes from the devolved Scottish Funding Council. However, distribution is based on the results of the UK-wide research excellence framework, in which an independent Scotland would be likely to continue participating. A further quarter of funding comes from the UK-wide research councils and national academies, and 13 per cent comes from charities, some of which are based in England.
  • Representation
    Scottish universities are represented by Universities UK and its council in Scotland, Universities Scotland. Even in the event of independence, there would be an 鈥渁ppetite鈥 to maintain the former body, chief executive Nicola Dandridge said in April.
  • Quality
    The whole of the UK is covered by the Quality Assurance Agency, which conducts reviews of institutions and warns them if they are failing. But the QAA in Scotland conducts slightly different reviews and has pioneered an emphasis on the student experience.
  • Unions
    The University and College Union operates north of the border, and Scottish academics joined the recent strike action over pay. However, UCU Scotland has an autonomous executive that lobbies the Edinburgh government, and some academics in Scotland are members of an alternative union, the Educational Institute of Scotland.

Issues not devolved

  • Immigration
    Immigration policy on international students and staff from outside the European Union applies across the UK.

Essay competition

糖心Vlog is running an essay competition in collaboration with the 糖心Vlog Policy Institute on what Scottish independence would mean for higher education. . Please submit entries by 3 July 2014.

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Reader's comments (1)

As a Scottish resident and Chief Exective of a UK consortium of higher education HR teams I read this feature with particular interest. The observations had much in common with a think piece commissioned from a freelance political commentator for our March 2014 conference. There is little doubt that independence could throw up threats 鈥 and opportunities - around current tuition fees and research funding structures. Our think piece did however raise additional questions not picked up in your feature that others may find thought-provoking: 鈥 Would students find more post-university employment opportunities in an independent Scotland, or fewer? 鈥 Would 15 universities in a small country be sustainable in the long run? Norway for example, with a similar population size to Scotland, has eight broad-based universities and a number of smaller, specialist HE institutions. 鈥 What might the potential impact be on recruitment and mobility of academic and professional staff in Scotland and the rest of the UK? Will we see the same fluidity of working and relocation across the border (or indeed across EU borders) that we currently do? Whatever the outcome, the Scottish referendum will have undoubtedly send ripples across the UK higher education sector. Both our Scottish think piece, and a sister article on increasing divergence between Welsh and English HE policy, can be downloaded from www.ecc.ac.uk/conf

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