糖心Vlog

Is backstage plotting a good thing in higher education?

Machiavellian tactics used by university leaders and their minions are often viewed as malevolent, but they are vital to running an organisation, says new study

Published on
November 5, 2015
Last updated
February 16, 2017
Magician pulls rabbit out of hat
Source: Alamy

How much are the dark arts of Machiavellian manipulation applied in the running of a university?

Quite a lot, argues a study that has revealed some of the unseen political manoeuvres, tricks and tactics used by management to push through controversial and unpopular policies at UK universities.

But the spinning, schmoozing and other types of 鈥渦nder-stage鈥 activities that go on outside the meetings where decisions are made officially should not always be viewed as underhand or malign, according to the new Leadership Foundation for 糖心Vlog report.

In fact, the use of such tactics is often both necessary and desirable if those in leadership positions are to build consensuses and effect institutional change, says , In the Wings and Backstage: Exploring the Micropolitics of Leadership in 糖心Vlog.

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鈥淐ommand and control is a very weak force in universities 鈥 academics are a stroppy lot and don鈥檛 like being ordered around,鈥 said its author Jacky Lumby, professor of education at the University of Southampton.

To lead a large cohort of headstrong staff requires more than just the 鈥渢echnical skills鈥 of applying the numerous rules and regulations, Professor Lumby added.

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鈥淚f you want to get anything done at a university, you need to use a more subtle set of skills.鈥

Her judgment is supported by many of the 14 higher education leaders, including vice-chancellors and pro vice-chancellors, interviewed by Professor Lumby for the study.

鈥淭here is a group of vice-chancellors who are extremely engaged in what you might call the 鈥榰nder-stage鈥 activity,鈥 confided one university leader quoted in the report.

Another interviewee called this politicking the 鈥渓ifeblood of all universities鈥, while another branded it a 鈥渇act of organisational life鈥.

鈥淚f you want to operate in a university, you have to learn to operate through influence,鈥 observed one vice-chancellor.

鈥淚f you have to exercise power in its naked form, you鈥檙e perhaps doing something not quite right,鈥 according to another interviewee.

One registrar suggested that 鈥渋t isn鈥檛 enough to simply exert influence down the line management chain, one needs to be able to influence across and upwards as well.鈥

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Even those at the very top of an organisation still paid attention to politicking, with one describing efforts to build a 鈥渓egitimacy base鈥 for forthcoming institutional changes.

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One key area where 鈥渕icropolitics鈥 are crucial is meetings 鈥 or more precisely, the games played before departmental or senior management meetings.

鈥淲e are so short of time that it isn鈥檛 always practical to present people with an idea, have rational discussions and eventually come to a decision on an issue,鈥 said Professor Lumby, who added that her interviewees viewed this open-ended decision-making process as time-consuming and ineffective.

鈥淚n an ideal world, leaders will speak to everyone and get their view, but this is not generally the case,鈥 she said.

鈥淭hey would instead do something more informally outside the meeting, such as having conversations in the corridor or over a cup of coffee.鈥

More idealistic junior academics are often unwilling to throw themselves into this sort of game-playing, but they need to be aware that it is happening to avoid ending up on the wrong end of it, Professor Lumby said.

鈥淲e tend to be taught a textbook 鈥榟eroic鈥 model of leadership where everyone is transparent and collegial,鈥 she said.

鈥淲e do not get the part about what it is really like to be a leader 鈥 micropolitics is a fundamental and universal part of leadership practice.鈥

jack.grove@tesglobal.com


Nine political tricks used in higher education management

Some of the sector鈥檚 more common tactics, as revealed by managers interviewed for the Leadership Foundation report

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  • Using quick-fire questions, selective information and insistence on immediate decisions at meetings so a chair can 鈥渞ailroad鈥 people into their way of thinking
  • 鈥淐orridor conversations鈥 to build a pre-meeting consensus, thereby avoiding 鈥渕ass counterproductive confrontation鈥
  • Controversial items being placed further down a meeting agenda and minutes being prepared in a way that obscures opposition to a forthcoming change
  • Meetings being swamped by large numbers of incomprehensible papers
  • Stage-managed information roadshows being used to ensure that presentations and questions are carefully controlled
  • Vice-chancellors or pro vice-chancellors being invited for a cup of coffee in a public place to talk over an issue so others see that a manager has the ear of influential figures
  • Relationships with national figures being cultivated to build a manager鈥檚 status within an institution
  • Vice-chancellors avoiding speaking first on tricky issues, thereby inhibiting debate or projecting a sense that a decision has already been made
  • Having a more secure grasp of details than opponents.

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Backstage with Machiavelli and the vice-chancellor

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