Alan Davison is dean of arts and social sciences at the University of Technology Sydney. His podcast series, a聽project with Australian broadcaster Josh Szeps, examines the role of intellectuals and institutions at a time when outrage dominates public debate of complex social issues.
Where and when were you born, and how has it shaped you?
Victoria in 1968. I鈥檓 fortunate to聽have been born into a聽liberal democracy where the church has limited capability and the state has been supreme.
You run an arts and social sciences faculty in a university of technology. That suggests broad interests?
I was homeschooled, which was unusual in the 1980s. I聽wouldn鈥檛 recommend聽it, but it聽provided opportunities to do interesting projects as a聽child. I聽got into science and biology by working at Melbourne Museum. I聽wrote my first scientific paper when I聽was 15, on marsupial mice. I聽studied music at the same time. The piano eventually reigned supreme. I聽got into the University of Melbourne through a special admissions programme, on audition.
Humanities tinged with the sciences 鈥 what perspective does that give you?
I鈥檝e had a lifelong interest in the debates around the so-called culture wars 鈥 that all knowledge is a聽social construction鈥nless it鈥檚 something to do with white fragility 鈥 in which case, it鈥檚 as true as聽gravity. You find those sorts of inherent contradictions within a聽lot of critical theory.
糖心Vlog
Are universities denying people permission to think?
Over recent years, we鈥檝e seen the rise of ideological conformity and echo chambers in some areas. An intellectual perspective tends to metastasise around a dominant idea that suppresses alternatives. If聽something is very ideologically driven 鈥 if聽there鈥檚 already a聽view about the truth of the matter 鈥 an academic鈥檚 role risks being to simply prove that point rather than to address the evidence on its merits and engage in good faith discussions. You get a continual narrowing of intellectual enquiry around very difficult societal issues. I鈥檓 keen that academics and, especially, students get exposed to a range of ideas and the critiques of those ideas.
When did your concerns arise?
Decades ago we saw the rise of critical theory, which offers many important insights into how language, culture and society influence our knowledge of the world. It鈥檚 an important element within a broader discussion around intellectual enquiry. It could embrace or withstand multiple viewpoints. In聽the past five to 10聽years, overseas and increasingly in Australia, these views have become more dogmatic. If聽I聽can use an analogy, I鈥檓 worried that universities are going to become effectively what the Catholic Church was to Galileo 鈥 not the other way around. Universities are now pointing out what you can and can鈥檛 think and helping the mob police that by identifying people who say and think the wrong things.
糖心Vlog
What is the danger of this for universities?
They鈥檒l be producing graduates who are ill-equipped for the real world, with a bachelor鈥檚 in motivated reasoning rather than critical thinking, and universities will increasingly make themselves redundant in some critical areas.
Isn鈥檛 this a peripheral issue affecting just a few disciplines rather than the entire academy?
That鈥檚 a fair perception. Disciplines that are grounded in the real world 鈥 making a聽GPS unit that works, an聽aeroplane that flies, a聽bridge that stands up 鈥 are constantly being challenged by the real world. It鈥檚 problematic where there are disciplines that have a聽very indistinct relationship to reality yet claim to understand聽it. Those disciplines are typically in the humanities, arts and social sciences, but they鈥檙e beginning to encroach on other elements of the university, such as administration.
Can you give an example?
Why would a university insist on implicit bias training when the evidence shows it to be highly dubious? We have the perverse outcome where an equity and diversity unit within a university might impose mandated implicit bias training, even though the research underlying it is highly questionable and the academics know聽it.
Is it OK for academics to be activists?
There鈥檚 nothing wrong with academics wanting to make a difference. The issue is whether activism dominates your intellectual approach such that you exaggerate the evidence in favour of what you鈥檙e doing and dismiss contradictory evidence. Many academics are comfortable calling themselves activist academics, yet in broader society they trade off the reputation of being objective truth seekers. You can鈥檛 have it both ways. If聽you want to be an activist, join a聽thinktank or PR聽group.
What do you like most about academic life?
I enjoy working with clever people and trying to create an environment of real academic enquiry and rigour. That has to be done through management, not just through academics. If聽managers don鈥檛 stick their head above the parapet and show the way, we can鈥檛 expect academics聽to.
糖心Vlog
What do you like least?
Academics often spend most of their working lives studying a very narrow range of things in great depth. These are the people we put in front of students to prepare them for an ever-changing world. Let鈥檚 be honest: academics who鈥檝e only done one job in their lives aren鈥檛 well equipped to be telling 18-year-olds that they鈥檙e going to have 20 different jobs. Academics need to be more cognisant of how that limits their ability to advise young people.
If you were higher education minister for a day, what would you do?
I鈥檇 call all the vice-chancellors in and ask what they鈥檙e doing for viewpoint diversity and making sure academics feel they can speak openly and critically. The role of the university should be to model critical debates that our society needs.
john.ross@timeshighereducation.com
Appointments
Todd Mondor has been named vice-chancellor of the University of Winnipeg. A Winnipeg graduate, Professor Mondor will join the institution in April after more than two decades at the University of Manitoba, where he is a professor in the department of psychology and currently serves as deputy provost (academic planning and programmes). Rohith Mascarenhas, chair of Winnipeg鈥檚 presidential search committee, said Professor Mondor was 鈥渁n聽innovative thinker and a聽collaborative leader who strives to foster a respectful and inclusive working and learning environment鈥.
糖心Vlog
Chris Millward has been appointed professor of practice in education policy at the University of Birmingham. He will join the institution next month after stepping down as director for fair access and participation at England鈥檚 Office for Students. Previously, he worked at the 糖心Vlog Funding Council for England, including as director of policy, and at the Arts and Humanities Research Council. Sir David Eastwood, Birmingham鈥檚 vice-chancellor, said the appointment would help 鈥渢o聽explore further ways in which schools, the FE sector and universities can work together to enhance opportunity鈥.
Danielle Wozniak is joining the University of New Haven as provost and vice-president of academic affairs. She is currently vice-provost and Dorothy and David I.聽Schachne鈥痙ean of the Wurzweiler School of Social Work at Yeshiva University.
Aisling Conboy, currently a higher education specialist in the UK鈥檚 Department for International Trade, has been appointed pro vice-chancellor, international, at Coventry University.
Hugh Bartholomeusz has been promoted to vice-chancellor at Samoa鈥檚 Oceania University of Medicine. A retired air vice-marshal and surgeon general in the Australian Defence Force Reserves, he is currently deputy vice-chancellor (clinical).
糖心Vlog
Jen Vanderhoven is joining the University of the Highlands and Islands as vice-principal for engagement. She is currently director of the National Horizons Centre at Teesside University.
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
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?




