
Students and staff at the University of Tasmania (UTAS) are campaigning against the administration鈥檚 decision to cut critical courses and staff.听
The restructure, announced in May, includes cutting at least 12 academic staff and removing dedicated programs in tourism, sociology, philosophy, political science and German.听
Politics and International Relations are being merged into one major, some philosophy units are being cut and Indonesian has been given only a temporary extension.
Social Work, Policing and Emergency Management are being moved into the Health College, while Creative Arts and Media will be split into a standalone Conservatorium of Music and a new School of Creative and Performing Arts. Media studies will be folded into the already merged School of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Save UTAS Arts has been campaigning against these cuts, organising petitions, banner drops and studebt consultation. It has also聽met with university executives and are talking to local and state politicians and the media to spread awareness.
These cuts show that UTAS management has embraced the neoliberal market-driven education model, which means cutting critical staff and courses to balance budgets.听
As successive governments have , from 0.9% of gross domestic product in 1995 to 0.6% in 2021, universities have turned to student fees, particularly from international students, to fill the funding gap.
The focus on finding more funds has led universities to behave more like businesses than public institutions, and turned education into a product to be sold, with students becoming 鈥渃ustomers鈥.听Administrative overheads and management wages have ballooned, while academic and teaching staff are largely casualised.
The fragility of the neoliberal model was laid bare by the pandemic, as tight border restrictions cut off universities鈥 lucrative international student fees.听
While Anthony Albanese鈥檚 attempt to impose international student caps last year was defeated, the government has implemented a 鈥渟low-down鈥 mechanism which, according to the ,聽has led to a 30% decline in international student visa applications.
Universities are scrambling to cut costs by targeting experienced staff, specialist disciplines and entire faculties.听Meanwhile management has protected itself; UTAS Vice-Chancellor Rufus Black has kept his annual聽.听
UTAS claims to be consulting staff and students. However, it is little more than retrospective justification for decisions already made.听
Many courses suffer from chronic underinvestment, loss of staff and a reduction of in-person teaching, issues which predate the pandemic. Addressing these would require meaningfully engaging with those most affected 鈥 students and staff.
The courses on the chopping block have already been systematically hollowed out, so they can be declared unsustainable. If change was necessary, cutting executive salaries and utilising UTAS鈥 multi-million dollar property portfolio should be considered.
According to a survey conducted by Save UTAS Arts, only 2% of students feel like they had a say in the decision-making process. While the Tasmania University Student Association was formally consulted, it said it was not listened to.听Students have a huge stake in these decisions; they are often taking on years of debt to study.
UTAS鈥 decision to scrap tourism courses is particularly egregious when the industry accounts for 15.8% of Tasmania鈥檚 workforce 鈥 about 50,800 jobs. Tourism accounts for .听
While UTAS claims students will be able to achieve similar outcomes in business degrees or vocational training, ethical and ecological challenges, and聽Tasmania鈥檚 complex history and Aboriginal cultural heritage, requires skilled professionals and educators.
According to the OECD鈥檚 Programme for the International Assessment of Adult Competencies, Tasmania has the worst literacy rate in Australia, with half the population lacking adequate reading skills for daily needs, while also facing disadvantage in English and humanities outcomes.听
This points to a dire need for more government investment in education, not cuts to arts and humanities courses.
[Follow on Instagram for updates. Solomon Doyle is a University of Tasmania student and a campaigner with Save UTAS Arts.]