Become a Member
Geoffrey Alderman

By

Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Self-interest that hurts the state

July 16, 2012 10:07
2 min read

Everything that infuriates me about Israeli politics and society was encapsulated in two decisions taken in Jerusalem last week. The first concerns the status of Ariel University Centre in the West Bank. The second relates to the arrangements by which Israel's so-called "ultra Orthodox" citizens are able to avoid military service.

Ariel (of which I am a "guest professor") began life in 1982 as a branch of Bar-Ilan University. The centre became independent seven years ago, and currently boasts some 14,000 students - Jews, Druze and Arabs. Situated where it is, its activities have naturally attracted some hostility and the sporadic attention of boycotters but when I lectured there last year it was clearly a thriving academic institution, awarding its own internationally recognised degrees and carrying out world-class research.

Ariel is a fully-fledged university in all but name. It was in pursuit of this status that it applied to Israel's Council for Higher Education. Last week, the council's planning committee recommended that the application be rejected. Media reports initially suggested that the committee was exercised primarily by the fear that upgrading Ariel's status would bring upon the whole of Israeli higher education the wrath of the international boycotting community.

While it is true that the boycott brigades within Israel lobbied hard against Ariel's application, their activities had little if any bearing upon the recommendation. The truth is that the CHE is dominated by Israel's academic establishment, which acts primarily to protect its monopoly of the access to public funding that full university status permits. Ariel is in danger of falling victim to a species of particularly malodorous selfishness that protects privilege without the slightest shame.