My slides to accompany my talk on 31 October 2018 for the Contemporary Philosophy of Technology Research Group at the University of Birmingham. The talk posed the following questions:
1. What is the proposed Co-operative University for?
2. What is its relationship to hegemony, in its pedagogy, governance, regulation and funding?
3. Can it enable us to develop autonomous responses to the authoritarian, technocratic re-engineering of higher education?
There are more details here: https://philoftech.wordpress.com/2018/10/01/the-co-operative-university-as-anti-technocracy/
A recording of the talk will follow at this site.
6. Second-order mediations
•authoritarian managerialism: autonomy and accountability;
corporativism
•human capital theory
•markets and money: cognitive dissonance
•discourses of productivity, excellence, entrepreneurship and
impact
Against self-mediation
declining participation by mature learners, part-time study
academic, professional service staff and student ill-being
7.
8. •no exaggeration to say that our country’s future depends more
than ever on the success of our HEIs;
•we will not forget the underlying values of HE… joy and value of
knowledge pursued for its own sake; pursuit of the good, the true
and the beautiful;
•uncompromising in our protection of students’ interests… insist on
value for money for the student [and] also for the taxpayer;
•we will embrace both collaboration and competition.
Barber, Foreward, in DfE, 2017, pp. 8-9.
9. Effective competition compels providers to focus on students’
needs and aspirations, drives up outcomes that students care
about, puts downward pressure on costs, leads to more
efficient allocation of resources between providers, and
catalyses innovation.
The higher education sector in England is well suited to market
mechanisms driving continuous improvement.
DfE, 2017, pp. 43-5.
11. A co-operative is an autonomous association of
persons united voluntarily to meet their common
economic, social, and cultural needs and
aspirations through a jointly owned and
democratically-controlled enterprise.
International Co-operative Alliance (n.d.). Cooperative identity, values & principles.
https://bit.ly/2ttpFWG
12.
13. A long and emergent, international, pedagogical history of
alternatives.
•Experiments: Mondragon; FLOK; Procomuns; Plebs League;
Lucas Plan; National Council of Labour Colleges; International Co-
operative University; Anti-University; Free University of New York;
SSC; ROU; Reggio Emillia…
•Writing: Birchall; Boden, Ciancanelli and Wright; Bookchin; Cook;
Develtere; Egan; Facer; Jossa; Kasmir; Lenin; Luxembourg; Marx;
Moss and Fielding; Newton; Orizet; Somerville; Winn and Neary;
Woodhouse; Woodin; Zygmuntowski…
16. Co-operation presents to the individual workers the unity and the will of
the whole body of social labour, developed in manufacture ‘which
mutilates the worker, turning [her] into a fragment of himself.’
In manufacture, the social productive power of the collective worker,
hence of capital, is enriched through the impoverishment of the worker
in individual productive power.
Marx, 2004, 482-83
All our invention and progress seem to result in endowing material
forces with intellectual life, and in stultifying human life into a material
force. All this antagonism between modern industry and science on the
one hand, modern misery and dissolution on the other hand.
Marx, 1969, 501
17. • Concrete moments in the development of social co-
operation in labour and appropriation.
• Access to the material, positive achievements of
capitalism, in order to underpin communal organisation.
• The political practice of co-operative production
confronts and undermines subsumption.
• Working class for-itself is a moment of ‘auto-
determination’ (Negri, Marx beyond Marx, 162).
18. This is not possible without the community. Only within the
community has each individual the means of cultivating [her]
gifts in all directions; hence personal freedom becomes
possible only within the community. (Marx and Engels, 1998,
86)
when the worker cooperates in a planned way with others, [she]
strips off the fetters of [her] individuality, and develops the
capabilities of [her] species. (Marx, 2004, 447)
Against alienated socialisation; alienation of producers from
conditions of production; exploitation.
19. (c) We recommend to the working men to embark in co-
operative production rather than in co-operative stores. The
latter touch but the surface of the present economical system,
the former attacks its groundwork.
Marx, 1866. Instructions for the Delegates of the Provisional General Council
(4) In my expression of my life I would have fashioned your
expression of your life, and thus in my own activity have realized
my own essence, my human, my communal essence. In that
case our products would be like so many mirrors, out of which
our essence shone...
Marx, 1844. Comments on James Mill, Éléments D’économie Politique.
20. Marx: praxis in the prevailing system; form and content of social
production; self-mediation.
Newton, Bookchin: revolutionary intercommunalism or communalism,
as a process: “liberatory technology” is only possible within a
“liberatory society”.
Dunayevskaya, Holloway: beyond value – a new centre of gravity of a
new social order (c.f. Jossa and labour-managed firms).
Lenin: to organize the population in cooperative societies; relationship
to the State.
Luxemburg: competition/degeneration - the capitalist controlled
contradictions between the mode of production and the mode of
exchange.
22. • academia reproduced in relation to its leading performer(s) and their
cultures of performance management;
• governed by cultures of omertà, or silence, against exploitation,
domination and oppression;
• Omertà embedded inside a performative culture that enables co-
operation, giving certain individuals access to resources so that they can
compete;
• enforcing silence about the reality of that toxic, high pressured existence;
• demand cultures of dietrologia, or the desperate search for hidden
dimensions to surface reality, which can border on paranoia, especially in
terms of the maintenance of status.
23. Academics locked within a culture of sublimated
competition, conditional co-operation and desperation over
position and status, which then shape a space in which
overwork, precarity, hopelessness, ill-being are
normalised.
Hall 2018; Hall and Bowles 2016
25. • Not the ‘public university’.
• Exceed the idea of ‘public ownership’ with that of ‘common ownership’.
• A social form of property that is the antithesis of the right of free alienability.
• Compatible with an idea of the ‘public’ as a ‘commons’.
• ‘social co-operatives’ ( ‘solidarity’ or ‘multi-stakeholder’ co-ops).
How does technology enable co-operative vision, practices and organisational
models to be implemented and remain flexible (in the face of value)?
26. Platform co-operativism:
•to clone the “technological heart” of the new, digital platforms;
•redesigning algorithms and the ownership structures as transparent,
democratic, and revenue-redistributive;
•technological sovereignty for citizens (Platform Cooperativism
Consortium).
•intersectional issues/epistemic privilege (boyd, 2015; Srnicek, 2017);
•new forces and relations of production (Pasquale, 2016, 2018);
Uberfication (Hall, 2016);
•always-on task and always available (Huws, 2014);
•evaluative infrastructure, internalised at the level of the individual and
aggregated at the level of the platform (Kornberger et al., 2017).
27. • constant questioning of the governing principles of specific
communities, in order to refuse marginalisation, privilege and
power;
• sharing narratives about the lived experience of co-operation as a
continual form of praxis, constantly questioning assumptions
about open knowledge and technologies;
• sharing access to data such that their use can be defined
collectively for the provision of services beyond value;
• the open sharing of the full range of knowledge, skills and
capabilities.
28. The aim is to challenge hegemonic
forms of knowledge production,
circulation and accumulation, which do
not enable societies to engage with
crises of social reproduction.
33. April 2018: Two weeks ago the College formally
registered with the Office for Students and more
recently, our CEO and Vice Principal both attended
an Office for Students information event in
Manchester. The plans for acquiring Degree Awarding
Powers and developing a model for a future Co-
operative University are on track.
https://www.co-op.ac.uk/co-operative-university
34. Working towards a federation of autonomous co-operatives.
•Governance (Board, members, sub-committees, co-ops, Academic Board,
Principal, management team, delivery teams)
•Access and participation
•Outreach
•Support mechanisms
•Co-creation/open teaching, learning and research (TEF/REF)
•Continuous improvement
•Mature learners; BAME; carers; low income; SLDs; refugees.
•Authentic, holistic and values-centred.
•Public Interest Governance Principles (accountability, risk, VfM)
36. • Leicester Vaughan College: a new kind of institution in an
established tradition: Lower fees, no VCs;
• civic-facing education to working people in Leicester (1862);
• skills for leisure and interest, as well as work;
• joins UoL in 20th
Century;
• Vaughan College closed; disestablishment of Centre as
academic Department (2013/16);
• re-founded as a Community Benefit Society (2017).
37. •LVC Community Benefit Society Objects
•education as a public good
•a broad range of students from diverse communities
•fully-accredited, face-to-face, part-time learning open to anyone
•benefits communities in addressing the challenges faced by
society
•support an equitable and sustainable working context
•reflect local needs, and our local and economic context
•an alternative model of HE pedagogy over profit.
38.
39. Introductory Counselling Courses
Humanities courses Interdisciplinary courses
Counselling CPD
HE Cert Counselling *
HE Cert Human Culture and
History
HE Cert Social SciencesHE Cert Drug and Alcohol Counselling
HE Cert Heritage and
ConservationHE Cert Psychology and Counselling
DIP Counselling
DIP Human Culture and History DIP Social SciencesDIP Drug and Alcohol Counselling
DIP Psychology and Counselling
BA Counselling (top up) BA Human Culture and History BSc Social Sciences
MA Counselling MA Society and Culture
40. Learning about (and practicing) the co-operative movement:
• Studying co-operation explicitly across disciplines;
• Co-operative studies within a discipline;
• Embedding co-operative learning;
• Co-operation-as-praxis.
Co-operative pedagogy: student-as-producer
The Co-operative as a site of pedagogic production
41. Against what the University has become
democracy into/through the curriculum
inter-disciplinarity/beyond the discipline
uncover alienated-labour and its mediations
less harmful conditions of production
44. the real intellectual wealth of the individual depends
entirely on the wealth of [her] real connections.
Only this will liberate the separate individuals… Bring
them into practical connection with the production
(including intellectual production) of the whole world
and make it possible for them to acquire the capacity to
enjoy this all-sided production of the whole earth
Marx and Engels (1846/1998). The German Ideology, p. 59.
45. • An alternative set of relations, predicated upon co-operation: the realm of
necessity, and the realm of freedom.
• Abolition of academic labour through ‘the experience of the combined
worker… in putting the theory into practice’ through co-operation (Marx
1991, pp. 198-99).
• Possibilities of democratic regulation of transnational worker co-operatives
and solidarity economies, as pedagogic moments.
• Self-mediation: the abolition of second-order mediations, and the
reinforcement of the springs of cooperative wealth (Marx, 1875).
• The material conditions of production are the co-operative property of the
workers, then there likewise results a distribution of the means of
consumption different from the present one (Marx, 1875).
46. a little more of a politicised relation to truth
in affairs of education, knowledge and
academic practice
Amsler, 2013, The Fearless University
47. This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.