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Reflections on Students Union Governance

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Title: Reflections on Students Union Governance


1
Reflections on Students Union Governance
  • Jim Dickinson
  • Manager of Regions Development NUS

2
Purpose of Presentation
  • History and Background
  • Context to Governance and Reform
  • Understanding of the debates and paradoxes within
    Governance
  • Understanding of wider political thrusts and
    constructs
  • Suggestions, Options, Choices

3
Democracy
  • Democritus
  • Of, pertaining to, or after the style of
    Democritus the Greek philosopher, known as the
    laughing philosopher. The practice of democritus
    is laughing at everything

4
Governance
  • Governance
  • The state of being governed (1590)
  • Governing system or body
  • Mode of living

5
In the beginning
  • NUS started with a small number of old /
    redbrick universities in 1922
  • Local Governance was by SRC (Student
    Representation Council)
  • Small national conferences
  • Interrupted by World War II
  • NUS collection of gentlemens clubs
  • Small higher education sector
  • No politics could be discussed

6
By the early 60s
  • We had
  • Robbins report
  • Expansion of higher education
  • Polytechnics
  • CATs became universities
  • New universities

7
By the late 60s
  • This happened
  • Jack Straw becomes NUS President and constitution
    changed to enable NUS to have political debate
  • Growth of sabbatical officers
  • NUS Conference gets bigger (and bigger)
  • Governance by general meeting
  • Similar in style to Trade Union mass meeting
    democracy

8
By the start of the 70s
  • We had political radicalism
  • Anti-apartheid movement
  • Womens Rights (Abortion Act)
  • Fascist regimes in most of Europe / Latin America
  • Greece
  • Spain
  • Portugal
  • Soviet Bloc
  • Vietnam War
  • Coup in Chile
  • Democracy movement in Northern Ireland
  • Miners strikes to name but a few

9
In the 70s
  • Parallel era of Students Union campaigns
  • Occupation at Hornsey College of Art
  • (Kim Howells)
  • Autonomy issues
  • Campaigning on overtly political issues
  • Occupations became the favoured tactical option
    based on General Meeting decisions

10
into the 80s
  • 1970s growth of activism
  • 1979 Election of the Thatcher Government
  • (determined to knobble Unions)
  • (1973 failed attempt by Mrs Thatcher then
    Education Secretary)
  • 1981 Change to block grant funding in Unions
  • 1984 Miners Strike
  • NLP court case establishes charitable status
    issues

11
In the 80s
  • Definition of Students Unions as charities
  • 1985 ultravires payments definition of what
    Unions can and cannot spend money on
  • End to political donations and payments
  • 1986 Education Act to prevent no platform
    policies

12
In the late 80s
  • Late 80s - Numerous attempts to legislate against
    Students Unions, most notably Tim Janman
  • Switch from General Meetings back to councils
    (attendance accountability)
  • Trade Unions move to postal balloting
  • 80s/90s growth of commercialisation
  • Further growth in number of Sabbs and student
    numbers

13
Into the 90s
  • Trade Unions have abandoned mass meetings and
    mass picketing
  • Participation in Students Union elections cause
    concern
  • Charities and not for profit examine new
    methods of governance

14
Into the 90s
  • 1994 Education Act
  • Great campaigning minimised potential damage to
    NUS and Students Unions but increases
  • Institutional scrutiny and responsibility for
    overview
  • Falls in volunteerism
  • Gap in governance scrutiny in many Unions
  • NUS portrayed by its opponents/denigrators as
    out of touch and unaccountable
  • Local Institutional Codes of Practice
  • 1990s Execs become all powerful supreme
    Soviets

15
Into the 90s
  • Participation rates in Unions fall further
  • Election of Labour Government in 1997
  • Office of the Deputy Prime Minister promote a
    revolution in management practice and governance
    in Local Authorities
  • Various working groups on good practice
  • Charities Bill, 2005
  • Students Unions remain largely unregulated

16
What is Good Governance?
  • Good governance is a powerful tool in driving
    forward organisational goals bad governance is
    fatal to performance and stability
  • ACEVO Rethinking Governance
  • Clarity about objects, vision, mission and
    values
  • Efficient structures, policies and procedures
  • Clearly identifiable Trustee body, right balance
    of skills and experiences
  • Manages and uses resources to optimise potential
  • Accountable in a way that is transparent and
    understandable
  • Flexible enough to influence and adapt to change
    in the environment
  • Charity Commission Hallmarks

17
(No Transcript)
18
Reform in the air
  • Nolan principles
  • Corporate reform after scandals
  • Local Government reform and work of ODPM
  • NUS reform
  • NUSSL example
  • Recent NUSAMSU/NUSSL seminar

19
Environmental change
  • Change is size and diversity of student
    population, grown from homogenous village into
    cosmopolitan towns
  • Time poverty and change in motivation of students
  • Impact of technology and competition upon social
    behaviour of students
  • Activist model clearly is unrepresentative

20
Maturity of SUs
  • Increasingly want to do things well not just be
    allowed to do them
  • Move from independence to inter-dependence, more
    self-confident, more open to outside influences
  • More honest about role of staff in organisation
    and concern about reliance on this

21
Failure
  • Many SUs are achieving unprecedented poor
    financial results. This isnt just about local
    performance or quality
  • Long term proportional student participation
    generally is in decline. In the case of
    governance this undermines legitimacy
  • SUs not seen as relevant to growing sections of
    the student population
  • Challenges are becoming greater and more complex

22
Why Governance Reviews?
  • Existing structures not relevant to modern HE
    environment
  • There is a pretence that it all works
  • Having the whole exec as Trustees doesnt work
    and is totally unrealistic
  • Poor match up between legal responsibilities and
    current structure, most notably the role of
    Council
  • Little real transparency or accountability of
    Trustees
  • Many sectors of society are reviewing governance
  • SUs should develop their own solutions and
    mechanisms before they are imposed
  • The SU has an opportunity to show leadership in
    the SU sector

23
What is Governance?
  • Fundamentally about power and control
  • "What power have you got? Where did you get it
    from? In whose interests do you exercise it? To
    whom are you accountable? And how can we get rid
    of you? Tony Benn
  • Lets find a way to get officers relieved of
    management and day to day running and get them
    refocused, and perhaps reclassed, by extolling
    the virtues of trusteeship and representation.
    Peter Robertson

24
Two Traditions
  • Two traditions
  • Self help/mutualism and
  • Charity
  • Charity- Philanthropy by the well to do
  • Mutuality- Centred on working class traditions-
    credit unions etc
  • Unincorporated associations
  • Mutuality dies out across 20C, Charity grows

25
SUs as Charities?
  • Significant bodies of advice on Governance
    aimed from and at Charity Tradition
  • Students unions are an odd fit- self organised,
    democratic, structurally based on mutualism
  • Adoption of UI structures
  • Recipients of taxpayers money- Charitable style
    funding
  • Uneasy status- deemed charitable in 1980s in
    response to political activity

26
Charity Law and Reform
  • Recent drive for User Representation on Charity
    Boards but still not common (LRTA)
  • Key principle of Charity is that trustees do not
    benefit from involvement
  • Where does that leave UIs deemed as Charitable?

27
Charity Law and Reform
  • Other key principles include
  • Selected for skills and knowledge
  • Complex organisations need sophisticated trustees
    able to deal with the responsibilities
  • Unpaid
  • Key principle of volunteerism upheld by public
  • Not beneficiaries
  • Conflict of Interest
  • Trustees are Trustees
  • Helicopter involvement
  • Not mixing governance with management

28
Students Unions Trustees
  • Those, according to the Governing document, in
    control of the management and administration of
    the Charity
  • In Students Unions
  • All elected
  • Often all paid (not at sabbatical rates!)
  • All beneficiaries
  • Mixing Governance with Management
  • Board is mandatable
  • All accidental!
  • Taken in the context of quality charity
    governance
  • bad news
  • Taken in the context of mutualism
  • some good news

29
So- what are we good at?
  • Senior management manage the board, AGM and
    Directors
  • Incredible strength in user involvement
  • Democratic Structures- used less for policy but
    still used for crisis
  • Sabbaticals- Incredible learning curve, closeness
    to constituents, passion energy, hat juggling

30
A Comparison
31
Governance Paradox
  • Who Governs?
  • Representative v Professional Boards
  • But there is, and will continue to be, a tension
    between the management driven and output related
    approach which is central to many recent changes,
    and the need for organisations providing public
    services to involve, respond to, and reflect the
    concerns of the communities which they serve
  • Nolan 1996

32
Representative/Professional
  • Community Representation in public and voluntary
    organisations achieved through election or
    stakeholder selection
  • Defined as the VS Board legitimacy
  • Example FE College Corporations
  • Stakeholder Bodies with selected membership
  • Tension in skills/knowledge mix
  • Limited elections (staff and students)

33
Representative/Professional
  • Legitimacy Effectiveness Accountability
  • Move toward managerialism
  • 80s education reform- Black papers
  • Quangos- removing democratic accountability
  • Pendulum swings back- Making accountability
    real
  • Carvers Moral Ownership

34
Representative/Professional
  • The legitimate board- effective and accountable
  • Effectiveness
  • do you know what you are doing with my money?
  • training support (internal?)
  • accidentalism?
  • standard?
  • support for processes
  • effective processes

35
Representative/Professional
  • The accountable board
  • Transparency openness
  • External audit and evaluation
  • Benchmarking
  • Forums for consultation
  • The replicating board classes
  • Celebrating diversity

36
Performance/Conformance
  • Conformance (Compliance)
  • HS, Law, Regulation
  • Attention to detail, exercise of care, skills in
    monitoring, evaluation reporting
  • Students Union officers skills
  • Performance
  • Setting mission character, vision
  • Vision, Strategic Thinking, Risk Taking, Pro
    Activity
  • Students Union officers and little picture
    conservatism (one year cycles electoral
    imperative)

37
Performance/Conformance
  • Pressures
  • Be innovative and entrepreneurial
  • Targets, Monitoring, Audit, Constraint
  • Quasi-Autonomy- Control achieved through funding
    methodologies
  • Getting bogged down in compliance
  • Getting bogged down in day to day detail

38
Controlling/Partnering
  • Controlling/Partnering Management
  • Consent, Difference, Dissensus
  • CEOs- level of support they get
  • Setting agendas, deciding how issues presented,
    controlling information
  • Professional status- definitions of expertise
    (bars and CSR)
  • External support and careful analysis
  • Codes of standards

39
Dominant/Subservient
  • Dominant
  • All powerful- makes decisions- accountable in law
    for those decisions
  • Subservient
  • Mandatable by a wider body- told what to do by
    other bodies
  • In a membership charity, when do trustees get to
    veto?

40
Delegate/Trustee
  • Delegate representation.
  • elected officials do exactly what they think the
    people who elected them want them to do.
  • elected officials are merely "delegates" who
    mirror the preferences of the voters, and bring
    little interpretative initiative to their tasks
    as representatives.
  • The advantage of this notion of representation is
    that it is transparent and honest you get what
    you pay for.
  • The disadvantage is that a "delegate" is no
    better than the people who put him or her into
    office. If voters are shortsighted or irrational,
    then their representative will merely translate
    those attributes into public policy. If the
    student body were a campus of heroin addicts,
    then our elected officers would be busy getting
    clean needles!
  • Trustee representation.
  • This means that elected officials do what they
    think is best for the people, which may not be
    what the people themselves want!
  • In this sense, representatives treat their
    position as a form of public trust. The advantage
    of this view of representation is that it starts
    from some notion of the public good that exists
    above the selfish interests of individuals. It
    holds out the idea that representative government
    may correct for the shortsighted or irrational
    tendencies of the electorate. It also recognises
    a role for merit, and meritocracies, in public
    affairs.
  • The most obvious expressed disadvantage is that
    "trustees'" might themselves begin to act in an
    autocratic, self-interested, or even corrupt
    manner. Who rules the rulers? At the very least,
    the idea of '"trustee" representation rests upon
    the undemocratic premise that average people are
    incapable of managing their own affairs, and
    require the leadership of people wiser and more
    talented than they.

41
Delegate/Trustee
  • The trustee sees as the start point for interest,
    skill development and concern the organisation
    rather than those it seeks to serve. It already
    knows about the members. It needs to learn about
    the union.
  • The delegate sees as the start point for
    interest, skill development and concern the
    members rather than the edifice that seeks to
    serve it. It already knows about the union. It
    needs to learn about the students.
  • We might of course argue that both are crucial,
    and any serious examination of the
    trustee/delegate dichotomy says as much.
  • But consider the amount of time, investment and
    skills in each camp in a students union
    sabbatical officer. Consider what the members
    perceptions are. Consider your own skills and
    expertise. See any leanings?

42
Democratic/Representative
  • Terms rendered meaningless in students unions
    through overuse
  • Representative achieved in content, consultation
    and involvement
  • Democratic achieved in involvement
  • You can be a representative organisation without
    being a democratic organisation

43
Interest Definitions
  • The Board resolves interests
  • The interests of Students
  • The interests of the funder
  • Negative take- manipulable by the funder
  • Medium take- range of interests defined by the
    funder
  • Positive take- charity donation to an autonomous
    self help group
  • Role of students money- student as
    consumer/diversity profile of spender/involver
  • Boards having multiple accountabilities

44
Accountable Organisations
  • Market Accountability
  • Survey Accountability
  • Scrutiny Accountability
  • Moral Accountability
  • Political Accountability

45
The Challenge for Trustees
  • Demonstrate legitimacy in the face of structural
    and cultural differences to usual charities
  • Ensure that the compliance role is in place and
    effective
  • Ensure that any (even constructively defined)
    trustees are empowered

46
Wearing Hats
  • Portfolio Manager/Minister
  • I am the media sabb and manage the various media
    groups in the union
  • Mandatable, Elected Representative
  • I am part of the exec and so am accountable to
    the members through a council
  • Charity Trustee
  • As discussed

47
Wearing Hats
  • Different hats for different moments
  • Learning behaviours and skills/knowledge for
    different situations
  • Committee episodes separate the hats

48
The traditional board
  • One way of conceptualising the traditional
    board is to divide its key functions into three
  • 1. Regulatory- this is the compliance function
  • 2. Strategic- the development of the organisation
  • 3. Political- the response and role inside
    societys wider system
  • All 3 on an executive committee?

49
One Solution
50
One Solution
  • Would vitiate the problem of accidental
    trustees
  • Relieve student representatives from the day to
    day issues
  • Demonstrate legitimacy
  • Solve some of the oddities referred to earlier
  • Have a real cultural effect- improving the
    processes of Governance by building in external
    viewers to the compliance and organisational
    development aspects, whilst retaining direct
    membership control of the political.

51
Multiplicity of Functions
  • The Representative Organisation
  • Activist led and run- democratic debate over
    positions and mandatable officers
  • SRC, Union Council, Ed Welf, Media?
  • The Self Help Organisation
  • Amateur/Self run- community
  • Clubs, Socs, Acivities, Media?
  • The Benevolent Organisation
  • In the interests of
  • Bars, Shops, Welfare Services, etc

52
Multiplicity of Functions
  • Different forms of Governance for each?
  • Splitting off and out the functions?
  • How do we create
  • Better Trustees
  • Better Representatives
  • Better Activists

53
Strong Students Unions
  • Students Unions as representative bodies-
    campaigning for defence, promotion and extension
    of rights of members

54
Meetings
  • What does it do?
  • What power does it have?
  • Who accountable to?
  • What rules must it play by?
  • What does it achieve?
  • (recognising that the most important outcome of
    democracy is democracy itself)

55
Conclusions
  • Recognising and Managing Paradox
  • Benevolant Alturism v Self Organisation
  • Democracy v Managerialism
  • Processes v Outcomes
  • Bad democracy is no better or worse than bad
    governance/ management

56
Conclusions
  • New, better, more effective structures and
    processes- management, scrutiny and compliance
  • New, better, more legitimate structures and
    processes- democracy, accountability and activism

57
Where now?
  • Do we lead or do we follow?
  • Will Unions be forced to regulate?
  • Codes of conduct
  • Simplified governance accessible systems
  • Benchmark
  • New forms of governance
  • Revisit role of Unions and the role of Sabbatical
    Officers as activist / representatives and staff
    as avid servants
  • Should we be asking our members what they want?
  • New levels of debate and activism- religion

58
Final Thought
  • Student Identity- Questioning of authority power,
    radical
  • Education- change the world or fit into world
  • Vocational v General Education
  • Twelve voices were shouting in anger, and they
    were all alike. No question, now, what had
    happened to the faces of the pigs. The creatures
    outside looked from pig to man, and from man to
    pig, and from pig to man again but already it
    was impossible to say which was which
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