Hello all,<br><br>Can I add to Ruth's note something that might not be quite clear. Meyer-Viol does 75% of the teaching of Logic for the Philosophy programmes in the <b>University of London</b> under an intercollegiate scheme. That is, this proposal doesn't just savage the teaching of logic at KCL -- it has significant consequences for the other colleges too.<br>
<br>Apologies for cross posting.<br><br>Nik Gisborne.<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On 2 February 2010 13:40, Doug Arnold <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:doug@essex.ac.uk">doug@essex.ac.uk</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
Hello,<br>
I'm forwarding this at the request of Ruth Kempson. In short, it says that a number of<br>
colleagues at KCL in London are under threat, and asks for our support.<br>
Apologies for cross-posting.<br>
Best,<br>
Doug<br>
<br>
Linguists targeted for Redundancy at King's College London<br>
<br>
The management of King's College London has embarked on a program of radical<br>
restructuring in both its Science and Humanities Faculties. This program<br>
involves redefining research missions of Departments in these schools under<br>
thematic areas that, in Humanities at least, downplay many major areas of<br>
research and teaching, and explicitly exclude linguistics in any department.<br>
As part of this process, Jonathan Ginzburg has been targeted for redundancy<br>
on the grounds that he no longer fits the redefined group for applied logic<br>
and the theory of computing in the Computer Science: with testimony from<br>
leading international researchers that his work on the logical analysis of<br>
interaction falls directly within the new group description, this matter is<br>
now under appeal. Professor Shalom Lappin and Dr. Wilfried Meyer-Viol of the<br>
Philosophy Department have been summarily told that the College is<br>
"disinvesting" from computational linguistics, and that the plan for<br>
restructuring the School for Arts and Humanities will mean the elimination<br>
of their positions in Philosophy by August 31. The move is an attempt to use<br>
computational linguistics, a non-existent entity in Philosophy, to target<br>
these two researchers. Lappin's research is fundamentally interdisciplinary,<br>
integrating core areas of philosophy, specifically intensional logic, formal<br>
semantics, and philosophy of language into cognitive science, machine<br>
learning, and computational learning theory. Meyer-Viol is first and<br>
foremost a philosophical logician who does 75% of the logic teaching in the<br>
University, who publishes both in this area, in formal grammar, and in<br>
issues at the interface of syntax/semantics. They are fully integrated into<br>
the Department's research, teaching, and administrative activities. The<br>
School is also targeting other linguists, and other departments. It is worth<br>
pointing out that the King's Philosophy Dept. was ranked third in the UK in<br>
the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise, and the Principal, Rick Trainor, has<br>
referred to the Philosophy Department as "the jewel in the crown" of the<br>
College, so that this is an extraordinary way to encourage one of its<br>
strongest departments, ironically at a time when interdisciplinary research<br>
is very generally recognized by national and international funding bodies as<br>
the way forward.<br>
<br>
The issue is however wider than this, since these moves are made as an<br>
instance of a broad procedure affecting the entire academic community of two<br>
primary Schools of the College. Initiating movements to give people notice<br>
is going on in parallel with supposed consultation, with no attempt at<br>
finding alternative ways of reducing the salary budget: indeed all academics<br>
in Humanities have been told that they are in effect “at risk of<br>
redundancy”, even though the consultation process is only now beginning to<br>
take place. This is part of a pattern of widespread cuts and “restructuring”<br>
that is currently going on in British universities, but for such a<br>
distinguished institution of research, scholarship, and teaching to allow<br>
these management-led procedures in determining both academic content and<br>
individuals/areas to be targeted sets a very dangerous precedent for the<br>
suppression of academic freedom and the destruction of the autonomy of<br>
research across the UK and beyond.<br>
<br>
We urge you to write to the management at King's to protest these actions.<br>
The people to send email to are:<br>
<br>
Professor Rick Trainor (<a href="mailto:principal@kcl.ac.uk">principal@kcl.ac.uk</a>) Principal,<br>
<br>
Professor Jan Palmowski (<a href="mailto:jan.palmowski@kcl.ac.uk">jan.palmowski@kcl.ac.uk</a>), Head of School for Arts &<br>
Humanities,<br>
<br>
Professor Keith Hoggart (<a href="mailto:keith.hoggart@kcl.ac.uk">keith.hoggart@kcl.ac.uk</a>),Vice Principal for Arts &<br>
Science,<br>
<br>
Mr C. Mottershead (<a href="mailto:chris.mottershead@kcl.ac.uk">chris.mottershead@kcl.ac.uk</a>) Vice Principal for Research<br>
& Innovation<br>
</blockquote></div><br>