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| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Rewarding University Professors: A Performance Based Approach
The labour market demand for highly skilled employees is increasing; universities need high-calibre professors to train them. But the demand for superior scholars is not being met in some fields, despite a buyer's market for available Canadian academic personnel.
Many universities are suffering "academic flight" as competition for the best brains develops between the ivory tower and the private sector, on the one hand, and Canada and the United States, on the other.
Budget constraints at most universities make it difficult to recruit and retain the best faculty, but it is the current remuneration framework that is largely responsible for the shortage of star performers. This is because (1) existing pay-, tenure-, sabbatical- and seniority policies do not link rewards to performance and (2) powerful faculty unions, timid administrations, government indifference, and a pervasive egalitarian mind-set penalize excellence and prevent reform.
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Hymie Rubenstein
Hymie Rubenstein is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Manitoba where he has been teaching since 1973. He wasborn in Toronto in 1943 and is a triple-degree holder from the University of Toronto (B.A., 1966; M.A. 1968; Ph.D. 1976). His doctoral research (1969-72) took him to the small Eastern Caribbean country of St. Vincent and the Grenadines where he has been conducting ethnographic fieldwork ever since. This research has resulted in two books and dozens of articles on such topics as peasant family life, community organization, labour migration, and small farming. He is currently writing about the social and economic implications of marijuana production, consumption, and exchange in St. Vincent and has just published two journal articles on this topic (Ganja and Globalization: A Caribbean Case-Study. 2000. Global Development Studies 2(1&2):223-250; Reefer Madness Caribbean Style. 2000. Journal of Drug Issues 30(3):465-497.) Dr. Rubenstein has been interested in Canadian public policy issues since 1995 and has written dozens of newspaper and other pieces on such topics as academic accountability, student performance standards, pay equity, and unionization. He is a foreign fellow of the American Anthropological Association and has been a Canadian Who's Who biographee since 1994.… Read more Read Less…
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