Sustainable Political Correctness | |||
Scenario Logics Bi-Culturalism in New Zealand Sustainable Practice in Global Environmental Management Hi-growth NZ Economy The world by 2006 By the year 2006, world population growth
is reaching unsustainable levels and is running at 5% per year.
Regional pressures on clean air, soil and water supplies are greatest
in mainland China and in India. A considerable global 'industry'
is developing which centres on food security, audit and distribution
and which monitors sustainable production practice. International
agencies which specialise in the analysis of these problems have
been established, such as the International Phyto-Sanitary Commission,
(IPSC) which was founded by the WHO in 2000. Since the late nineties,
serious punitive sanctions have been applied by agencies such
as these to nations which transgress international guidelines
for sustainable practice.
Since this time too, there has been a significant
change in the positioning of universities and other higher education
providers in the world economy. There is a developing world emphasis
on strategic and environmentally useful research and on holistic
and systems-based intellectual metaphors. In both the developed
and the developing world there has been huge pressure in recent
years for client choice in education, in response to growing awareness
of cultural and individual learning differences. The world higher
education environment is growing more specialised and is extremely
competitive.
New Zealand in 2006
Since the New Zealand government revised its
Treaty of Waitangi in the light of the UN's International Concord
on Indigenous peoples (2004) and ratified 'Waitangi II ' in 2006,
the country has enacted a variety of power-sharing arrangements
which have caused fundamental revision of its constitutional and
public law. As in the 1980s, New Zealand has become the world's
social laboratory, but this time with regard to bi-cultural, rather
than economic reform.
Under the Bi-Cultural Action Act of 2004,
New Zealand's corporate organisations must follow affirmative
action practices with regard to Maori. Since the Land Redistribution
Act of 2003, a large part of the country's natural resources have
been owned by Maori. The attendant compensation regime for former
pakeha owners proved expensive for the then governing coalition,
and it was forced to expend much of the surplus accumulated during
the growth decade of the nineties. However, the radicalism of
the New Zealand experiment, and its close reflection of trends
toward cultural inclusiveness in international law, has made the
world take notice of New Zealand and to value both its natural
resources and its educational services. World demand for products
produced under the nation's sustainable and culturally correct
conditions is high.
The New Zealand Economy is healthy, due largely
to an export surplus generated by world demand for NZ's sustainably
produced agricultural products and to demand for NZ expertise
in this area. A considerable export consultancy industry has developed.
However, while fiscal surpluses exist, they are not equitably
shared amongst all social classes. In spite of affirmative action
policies, Maori are still significantly disadvantaged in economic
terms. Much of the land which was returned to Maori was rapidly
sold back to pakeha for short term gains. Maori retention in schools
and participation in higher education has improved, but it is
still not equal to that of pakeha students. While the overall
participation rate is now 37%, for Maori it remains at 11%.
NZ's higher education environment is flourishing,
with a high regional demand for applied research, and for study
in a safe and environmentally healthy location. The recently signed
PacRim trade agreement, (called PACOMM), allows for the interchange
of student vouchers and degree credits in all member nations.
The introduction of the bi-cultural regime meant that NZ universities
have been required since the passage of the 2004 Act to practice
quota-based student recruitment campaigns, and Maori have been
targeted for increased participation. Retention of Maori students
after first year, however, remains poor.
Lincoln in 2006
Te Wanaka o Aoraki, as the former Lincoln
University has been known since 2001, is a medium- sized institution
of higher learning which specialises in natural resources based
programmes, research and consultancy. It operates from a sustainably
run campus in a semi-rural area and offers both residential and
distance delivery programmes to about 10,000 students. The institution
is meeting its quota target of 20% of students who view themselves
as Maori. In 2002 Te Wanaka hived off its Commerce school into
a separately administered business unit with a mission to provide
short courses and consulting activities. None of what was once
called undergraduate education is provided by this unit. In 2004
the unit was subsequently sold to a large corporate investments
for an undisclosed sum, and has now renamed itself the Centre-Right
Business School. The 'science' section of the university is presently
divided into a Sustainable Food Production Faculty, a Leisure
Time Management Faculty and a Resource Management Faculty.
Accountabilities
Given the ever-increasing world focus on sustainability
and planetary care, there has in recent years been considerable
emphasis on the need for institutions of higher learning to demonstrate
the public and socio-economic returns provided by their key activities
of teaching , research, and trading. In New Zealand, this coincided
in the 1990s with the increased concern for the accountability
of public entities which derived from the nation's then fashionable
market liberal reform paradigm. Consequently, the PacRim Accreditation
Agency, (PRAA), established in 2000 to benchmark and brand all
regional products, applies international accreditation and credentials
to NZ degrees and research projects and requires that they demonstrate
returns to both major cultural groups. A teaching programme cannot
be delivered unless it is consistent with both NZ and world law,
and unless it is demonstrably portable and therefore educationally
'useful' on a global basis. There is now a requirement by the
agency that university and other higher educational natural resources
based and science courses contain base elements on sustainable
production and modular components on practices in other agricultural
systems.
Beside PRAA accreditation, Te Wanaka usually
aims for ISO 14001 accreditation for its products, a standard
which is delivered by the World Foundation for Sustainable Practice,
(WFSP).The requirements for accreditation are difficult to meet,
and programmes can be disestablished by the foundation if quality
standards do not meet annual audit requirements. However, such
credentials do ensure a good international market for the university's
products.
In addition to such international accountabilities,
the university is also required to demonstrate to the NZ government
its cultural safety, financial viability and return on individual
investment as a quid pro quo for a small amount of liability underwriting
to the institution. There are sometimes tensions between the university's
obligation to the PACOMM to cater for the cultural sensitivities
of students from all PacRim nations, and the NZ government's demand
for bi-cultural values to predominate.
To students, the university makes a guarantee
of employment, for two years in the case of a first qualification
and six months for other courses. While this seems an ambitious
target, it has recently been much facilitated by the university's
internship program, established in 2005. Under this system, the
employer undertakes to deliver corporate internship and study
support in return for some input into the nature of a particular
student's specialist level programmes once they have advanced
beyond level 6. Many of these employers are CRIs, who are seeking
to recruit new staff in view of the retirement of most foundation
staff hired in the 1990s. These relationships with employers,
while requiring a considerable increase in corporate staff who
specialise in relationship management, have generated useful research
synergies and have been made possible by the healthy economic
situation.
Teaching
There has been a legislated requirement in
New Zealand Law since the Education Amendment Act of 1999 that
all professional degrees require a generalist first degree. This
means that Te Wanaka offers a compulsory two year foundational
' lockstep' course to all its level 5 and 6 students. This contains
elements of oral history, public speaking, writing technique,
constitutional and environmental ethics, and systems-thinking.
The university also offers this course to franchise holding institutions
elsewhere in the PACOMM. The course is taught in several ability
streams, with the unfortunate result that many Maori students
find themselves in the lower stratum. The foundation course can
be avoided by students already in employment. Now that higher
education is open to all voucher holding PACOMM students this
foundation course also acts as a quality control device for the
university's higher level programmes. Students who do not pass
it have their internships severed and their guarantee of employment
repealed. This somewhat elitist arrangement, while counter to
the drive to retain able Maori students, seems to have enhanced
the image of the university. It is fortunate that this is so,
because since the NZ government removed the requirement for first
and professional degrees to delivered by institutions which are
involved in research back in 2001, higher education in NZ has
been extremely competitive. Te Wanaka's main competitor institution
is a large network organisation, the Networked Institute of Technology,
(NUT) ,which was established in 2004 by four polytechnics and
two offshore universities to deliver technical and applied educational
services.
Another serious competitive threat is the
Kellogg Corporation's environmental education consortium based
in Battle Creek Michigan, which last year cornered 27% of the
world's market in agricultural and resource management education
through a combination of distance delivery and franchise arrangements.
Te Wanaka failed to qualify as a NZ franchisee because the University
of Queensland-Bond, backed by the Australian Aboriginal Land Consortium,
(which under recent Australian power sharing arrangements, owns
most of the city of Sydney), acquired the franchise rights for
NZ. Another serious blow was delivered to the university back
in 2004, when fundamentalist regimes in Malaysia and Indonesia
banned western programmes which were not culturally safe. Te Wanaka
had hitherto been a significant provider of distance courses to
those markets.
Considerable changes have occurred in teaching
techniques at Te Wanaka in recent years. Now that 60% of NZ society
is non-European, the traditional western- style lecture has been
replaced by more interactive learning environments, and exams
have been replaced by portfolio assessments which acknowledge
prior leaning , work and life experience as well as institutionally
based instruction. Most NZ employers now demand graduates with
excellent communication skills, and staff at Te Wanaka devote
considerable attention to developing the interpersonal and intra-personal
skills of their students. There is a growing literature in NZ
on the manner which Maori involvement in the educational process
has contributed to less adversarial modes of cognitive activity.
The result had been considerable recent change in the tone and
style of learner interactions, toward more 'organic' and inclusive
metaphors. Aside from the personal emphasis this implies, students
at Te Wanaka now work largely with electronic publications. All
courses are on-line in order that they may be accessed from anywhere
in the PACOMM or by interns and post employment students in the
workplace.
Research Since the PACOMM nations jointly agreed in 2005 to allocate 1% of GDP to R and D funding, the university has maintained a diverse research programme in its core faculties. After an initial setback to the institutional research programme in 2002 when the then coalition government drastically refined national strategic research priorities to focus primarily on topics with a high degree of relevance to the bi-cultural ethos of NZ, ( which caused Te Wanaka to have to redeploy staff and rebalance its research portfolio), the university is now well established as a leading provider of socially useful research. Staff rely on electronic publishing facilities which are provided on campus by means of a strategic alliance with Cardinal Networks and Telecom NZ. The university is often a virtual reality conference venue for world symposia on sustainable development and food production, such are NZ's and the university's reputations in these fields.
The recent world development of a virulent
new strain of TB has posed some problems for Te Wanaka's researchers,
as the necessary capital expenditure on testing equipment is high.
It has also provided the opportunity however, for the introduction
of popular new courses in immunology and in biological control
and audit. The Department of Environmental Science has a world
famous research programme in the use of firefly as bio-indicators
of crop-based TB. The degree in Hospitality and Leisure Management
has refocussed some programmes on sanatoria management.
Research scientists at Te Wanaka are also
pre-occupied with the pernicious cereal fungus feildorum grandorum,
which in 2005 ravaged 30% of the Australian wheat crop. A collaborative
research project between the Aboriginal and Maori Wheat Research
trusts has made progress in combating the fungal invasion through
the use of non-toxic biological controls.
Trading and other Activities
There are considerable opportunities for Te
Wanaka to provide consulting services to the PACOMM community,
especially in view of the fact that most are developing nations
with a great need for food production assistance. In these activities,
the university acquires an enhanced image by trading on NZ's reputation
for the sustainable production of high quality export products
by methods which are culturally sensitive. NZ' s export regime
has benefited considerably since it joined the bloc in 2004 and
the opportunities for income generating commercial activity are
considerable within the region. Outside the PACOMM they are less
so, in view of the fundamentalist religious changes in many middle
and east Asian nations and with the USA's increasingly isolationist
retreat from the global economy.
Structure/ownership and management Like other NZ institutions of learning, Te Wanaka receives no direct government funding but has underwriting from government to the extent of 50 million dollars. It is also accountable to government for a variety of public good objectives. It derives 28% of its income from government indirectly by means of student purchase vouchers. Other trading activities account for 72% of Te Wanaka's income stream. The university has been jointly owned by Kai Tahu Inc. and Telecom PACOMM since the 1996 review of the government's asset portfolio caused the then National government to require that South Island Universities purchase themselves. The debt raised by Te Wanaka for this purpose was removed by the subsequent sale of the institution. 'Profits' are distributed to tribal and Telecom shareholders, while 50% of surplus must, under the terms of the company, be reinvested in the institution. The governing board makes all commercial decisions, but must allow academic staff views to prevail with regard to the government's specified public good objectives. The faculty of Resource Management is a limited liability company, while the faculty of Leisure Management is owned and operated by staff shareholders. The consulting and trading activities related to the university are operated through a variety of national, supra-national and regional ownership arrangements. For example, the PACOMM consulting and research activities are run by a supra-national trust on behalf of PACOMM trustees, which is headquartered in Borneo. According to the trust deed, all projects must benefit either sustainable production practice or the welfare of indigenous peoples. Managers are contracted into the Te Wanaka campus from a variety of international university management companies. Many research projects are operated collaboratively by means of pooling arrangements with educational or other consortia. LVL , for example, runs a joint venture with the Aboriginal Land Consortium for the production of training packages in sustainable agricultural practice. | |||
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