Title: Majoritarian Departmental Politics and the Professional Pyramid :
1Majoritarian Departmental Politics and the
Professional Pyramid
- Groupthink Mechanisms in Academia in the United
States
- Link to paper as published in The Independent
Review
2Classical liberal professors are rare
- Professors in the humanities and social sciences
(abbreviated h/ss) in the US are dominated by
social democrats.
- They are generally highly supportive of
status-quo interventions and welfare state
policies.
- In h/ss, Democrats outnumber Republicans about 8
to 1. (Democrats are almost never classical
liberals.)
31 pro-intervention5 pro-laissez-faire
4Economics an exception?
5- Economics is not nearly as different as many
think.
- Overall policy index 2.65
- D to R is about 2.9 to 1.
- Only about 10 of economists can be called
serious free-market supporters.
6Why so few classical liberals?
- Because academics are wise and enlightened, and
classical liberalism is unwise and
unenlightened.
- Because classical liberalism is wise and
enlightened, and academics are unwise and
unenlightened to the extent that they oppose
classical liberalism. - We proceed on the presupposition of 2.
7Why are liberal professors so rare?
- A broader question Why are liberals in general
rare?
- The question about professors is intertwined with
the question about people in general.
- Here we focus on structural features of academia.
We speculate on how bad thinking could become
locked-in and self-perpetuating.
8Groupthink
- -- the idea that a group can make bad decisions
and hold bad beliefs because of bad practices and
attitudes
- Excessive concurrence-seeking within the group.
A lack of critical examination within the group.
- Too insulated from outside criticism. Outsiders
are stereotyped.
- The group validates its own beliefs and
decisions. Little independent testing, analysis,
or evaluation.
9Groupthink
- The idea has academic respectability.
- It approaches cases with a presupposition of
defectiveness.
- Groupthink is an explanation for defective
thinking.
- Groupthink is pejorative.
- The term is used with hindsight.
10Groupthink settings
- The cases are generally narrow policy decisions
taken by a small group.
- Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba
- Vietnam War escalation
- Watergate cover-up
- Space shuttle Challenger disaster
- Etc.
- They are afterwards recognized as fiascos, even
by the perpetrators.
11Groupthink literature
- Irving L. Janis, Groupthink, 2nd ed., Houghton
Mifflin, 1982.
- Paul t Hart, Groupthink in Government A Study
of Small Groups and Policy Failure, Johns
Hopkins, 1990.
12Groupthink literature
- Sociology, social psychology literatures
- group dynamics
- organizational theory and behavior
- Groupthink is also applied in
- political science
- international relations
- public administration
- management
13Janis
- Groupthink refers to a deterioration of mental
efficiency, reality testing, and moral judgment
that results from in-group pressures. (9)
14Hart
- the focus of this study will be on flaws in the
operation of small, high-level groups at the helm
of major projects or policies that become
fiascoes. (4)
15Similarities between Janis-Hart and our
application
- The analysts presuppose that beliefs and actions
are defective/unenlightened
- There is an in-group
- many parallel mechanisms
16Differences between Janis-Hart and our application
- J-H groups are
- small
- chief-based
- concerned about security leaks
- often under great stress
- often making high-stakes or risky decisions
- dealing with immediate exigent issues.
17Differences between Janis-Hart and our application
- J-H groups sustain groupthink beliefs that are
- specific to the decision at hand
- shallow, not about ones identity
- greater potential for eventual admission of
defectiveness
18Differences between Janis-Hart and our application
- Compared to J-H groups
- Academic groups are
- larger
- group boundaries are blurrier
- less chief-based
- less policy/action oriented
- less stressful, urgent, risky, secret.
- Academic beliefs are
- deeper, more complex, 25-to-grave
- more like moral, political, and aesthetic values
19Adapting the theory to academia
- The differences make academia a less cohesive
group, with less clear policy decisions.
- However, certain structural features have made
each academic tribe more cohesive than meets
the eye.
20Groupthink in academia?
- How can entire disciplinary professionslike
Political Science, History, Sociology, and so
onbecome mired in unenlightened ideas?
- An explanation must relate micro decisions to
macro norms and values.
21What is the XYU History Department?
- You see XYU, with its campus and buildings.
- You think of XYU as a hierarchical organization,
led by the Provost or President, the trustees,
the Deans of the divisions or colleges.
- Beneath them, inside a building, on each floor is
an academic department.
22What is the XYU History Department?
23Department
- Department sounds like a part.
- It sounds like a sub-unit within a larger
agency.
- It sounds subordinate to agency chiefs.
24An Agency Unto Itself
- Important departmental decisions
- Who to hire?
- Who to tenure and promote?
- What to teach?
- What to research? Whom to write for?
- Which students to promote?
- The provost, dean, etc. cannot meddle in History
decisions. On questions of History, no one is
above the department. The department is
autonomous.
25Departmental Procedure
- How are hiring decisions made?
- Answer Majority vote.
- What happens when 51 percent share an ideology
and feel that to be a good colleague and
professor one must share that ideology?
- They hire one like themselves.
- Making it 60 percent, then 70 percent, then 80
percent . . .
- A tendency toward ideological uniformity within
the department.
- The gradual elimination of minority points of
view.
26Departmental Ethos
- However, a major principle is consensus.
- It is possible for a vocal minority to sink a
candidate.
- A tendency toward bland, OK-by-everyone
candidates.
27Diverse History Departments?
- The XYU History will tend to become ideologically
uniform.
- Might we get diverse History departments at
different universities?
28On what basis does the department decide?
- Important decisions (again)
- Who to hire?
- Who to tenure and promote?
- What to teach?
- What to research? Whom to write for?
- Which students to promote?
- Answer The professional norms and standards of
History, the profession.
- Partly, out of sincere faith in History
- Partly, out of practical need for focal points
for consensus making
29History The Profession
- Nationwide, each History dept functions within a
mono-centric club called History
- The club hierarchy cuts laterally across the
country
- The XYU History dept is more a creature of
History than of XYU
30The Professional Pyramid
- The ranking of
- Departments
- Journals
- Historians (leaders of the sub-field)
- Awards, kudos, grants
31Again, the History Dept at XYU
32Again, History cuts laterally in space
33Again, the XYU History Department is more a
creature of History than of XYU
34Professional Hierarchy
- People like to think that the discipline is
- filled with independent spirits and independent
centers of scholarship
- polycentric
- contestable
- diverse
- But if you get out the microscope and think about
how the profession functions, you realize it is
very hierarchical.
- It is highly focused on the apex (including
field apexes).
35The only encompassing standard
- Without an encompassing standard, a discipline
has no prospect of being a coherent enterprise.
- History is what historians do. Historians are
those with History degrees and History
appointments.
36Heterodoxy is heterodox
- Despite heterodox protestations, the pyramid
remains the gravitational well of group practice
and individual ambition.
- Heterodoxies focus on criticizing the mainstream.
People fight over influence and power within the
pyramid.
- If parallel pyramids get erected, they generally
are either ignored or are co-opted into the
official pyramid.
37How much real heterodoxy?
- There are almost no classical liberal historians,
especially at the apex.
- What are the classical-liberal parallel pyramids
in History?
38Material Resources
- Jobs, pay and security
- Not having to teach
- Grant money
- Grad students
- research assistants
- teaching assistants
- an audience
- protégés
39Encompassing public and private
- 70 percent of professors are government
employees.
- But privates schools are enmeshed in the same
History profession.
- New PhDs must be sold to the profession.
- Public or private doesnt matter much. XYU
History dept is mainly a creature of History.
40The market for History professors
- Is it like the market for waiters?
- Thought experiment
- What if waiters were like History professors?
41If Waiters were like History profs
- Each waiter job is controlled by a collection of
other waiters, a Waiter Department.
- Each Waiter Department spends money with slight
regard for the preferences of restaurant
customers.
- There are 200 Waiter Departments. Each Waiter
Department gets whatever prestige and
revenue-base it commands principally by adhering
to the standards of the encompassing club. - Each Waiter Department produces the new young
waiters, whom it tries to place in the pyramid.
42If Waiters were like History profs
- Non-waiters are deemed unqualified to criticize
the standards of the Waiter club.
- Waiters at top departments set the tone.
- Waiters at the top departments rub shoulders with
cultural elites.
43If Waiters were like History profs
- Then there might be a groupthink problem among
waiters.
44The market for Historians
- History is not like a normal labor market.
- Supply and demand consist of historians!
- Historians producing historians.
- Historians buying historians.
45A Professional Club
- History is like a genteel society drawing
resources indirectly, much from tax-payers.
- Circularities
- Self-validating Historians validate each other
and the pyramid
- They replicate themselves in PhD students
46A scary thought
- What if a small number of departments
- held unenlightened ideas
- validated each other
- gained influence over the entire discipline
- manufactured most of the new PhDs
- who then filled most of the jobs at all schools?
47The case of Economics
- Lets look at
- The percentage of economics faculty with Ph.D.
from the worldwide top 35 economics departments .
. .
- source D.B. Klein,The PhD Circle in Academic
Economics, Econ Journal Watch, April 2005
48The case of Economics
49The case of Sociology in US
- Val Burris, The Academic Caste System Prestige
Hierarchies in PhD Exchange Networks, American
Sociological Review, 2004 . . .
50The case of US Sociology in US
- Graduates from the top 5 departments account for
roughly one-third of all faculty hired in all 94
departments. The top 20 departments account for
roughly 70 percent of the total. Boundaries to
upward mobility are extremely rigid. Sociologists
with degrees from non-top 20 departments are
rarely hired at top 20 departments and almost
never hired at top 5 departments.(247-249).
51The case of Sociology in the US
- This information confirms the observation made
by six references deleted here that mobility in
academia is mainly horizontal and downward and
seldom upward (249)
52The case of Law in the US
- Brian Leiter of the University of Texas found
that
- Among all new faculty who started in
tenure-track law-school jobs between 1996 and
2001, more than one-third earned their J.D. from
just three law schools Yale, Harvard, and
Stanford.
53The scary thought . . .
- . . . is pretty much the way it is!
54Intellectual culture beyond the academy?
- Suppose the History pyramid goes a certain way.
Can it be challenged?
- Individuals and small circles of opinion can
criticize. But little salience or eminence in
the intellectual culture at large.
- The academic discipline is highly insulated. It
has cultural power. Outsiders are ignored.
- The market for History isnt a free market.
Enlightenment will not necessarily win.
55- Majoritarian departmental politics and the
professional pyramid
- The combination can explain why unenlightened
views come to dominate entire disciplines, and
why the views go unchallenged in the society at
large.
56Then and nowDemocrats per Republican
57Narrow-tent Democrats
- How much diversity under the Democratic tent?
- 1 pro-intervention
- 5 pro-laissez-faire
58Minimum wage laws
59Workplace safety regulation (OSHA)
60Pharmaceutical market regulation by the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA)
61Air-quality and water-quality regulation by the
EPA
62Laws making it illegal for private parties to
discriminate (on the basis of race, gender, age,
ethnicity, religion or sexual orientation)
against other private parties, in employment or
accommodations?
63Laws restricting gun ownership
64Redistribution policies (transfer and aid
programs and tax progressivity)
65Government production of schooling (k through 12)
66Government ownership of industrial enterprises
67Repubs policy views
68Dems policy views,more interventionist, less
diverse
69The Democratic tent is narrower
70Republicans sorted out
- Academic Not academic
- Dems 962 322
- Repubs 112 78
- 8.6 to 1 4.1 to 1
-
Significant at 1
71Groupthink happens
- Janis, Groupthink, Figure 10-1 (244), verbatim
bits of the figure
- Antecedent Conditions
- A Decision-Makers Constitute a Cohesive Group
- B-1 Structural Faults of the Organization
- 1. Insulation of the Group
- 4. Homogeneity of Members Social Background
and Ideology
- B-2 Provocative Situational Context n.a.
72Irving L. Janis
- C Symptoms of Groupthink
- Type I Overestimation of the Group
- Illusion of Invulnerability
- Belief in Inherent Morality of the Group
- Type II Closed-Mindedness
- Collective Rationalizations
- Stereotypes of Out-Groups
- Self-Censorship
- Illusion of Unanimity
- Direct Pressure on Dissenters
- Self-Appointed Mindguards
73Irving L. Janis
- D Symptoms of Defective Decision-Making
- Incomplete Survey of Alternatives
- Incomplete Survey of Objectives
- Failure to Reappraise Initially Rejected
Alternatives
- Poor Information Search
- Selective Bias in Processing Information at Hand
74Groupthink happens
- Irving L. Janis, Groupthink (1982)
- One of the symptoms of groupthink is the
members persistence in conveying to each other
the cliché and oversimplified images of political
enemies embodied in long-standing ideological
stereotypes (37). - When a group of people who respect each others
opinions arrive at a unanimous view, each member
is likely to feel that the belief must be true.
This reliance on consensual validation tends to
replace individual critical thinking and
reality-testing . . . (37).
75A Narrative
- In 1972 the h/ss faculty was preponderantly
Democratic. Heightened uniformity made the group
over-confident. Facing less testing and
challenge, the habits of thought became more
foolhardy and close-minded. Distant from real
intellectual critics, the professors latch on to
stereotypes. As the quality of belief
deteriorated, the group became more sensitive to
tension. This led to tighter vetting and
expulsion, more uniformity, more intellectual
deterioration.
76- The result is a professoriate lacking
intellectual tension. Taking behavioral cues
from one another, each faculty member gets
intellectually lazy and slips into bad
intellectual habits. Their stereotypes,
superstitions, and taboos are often
institutionalized as academic standards, and
permit them to evade real intellectual challenge.
77- The tenure vote cannot be put on trial. They can
lynch a vocal anti-leftist Assistant Professor
and get away with it. Anti-leftists know this
and respond accordingly.
78- Outsiders often think that the anti-left
professor only needs to get tenure. But graduate
school and pre-tenure employment is about 11
years. You find you are no longer yourself. - Your 20s and early 30s are a crucial period of
development and cannot be reversed.
79- Even after tenure, you depend on department
colleagues for pay raises, resources, teaching
assignments, scheduling, promotions, recognition,
and consideration. - Standing up for your ideas usually brings
acrimony.
- Thus, even tenured anti-leftists shrink from
criticizing the dominant ways of thinking.
80- The more uncongenial academia becomes, the more
anti-leftists sort themselves out.
- Anyone contemplating an academic career knows the
score.
- Graduate students never encounter classical
liberals.
81Sham diversity
- Tumbling to uniformity, the faculty touts
diversity.
- Regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, or sexual
preferences, everyone equally may share the
social democratic creed.
82Deep Groupthink
- Subversion of the liberal lexicon
- Freedom
- Liberty
- Liberalism
- Justice
- Rights
- Law
- Rule of law
- Equity
- Equality
- Contract
83Imagine the following dissertations
- F.D.R. prolonged the Great Depression
- American labor law hurts the poor
- Most recycling programs are a waste
- The school system in this country is a socialist
failure
- Social justice makes no sense
- Organizational integrity varies positively with
the voluntary basis of participation and funding
84Enlightened Ideas Frozen Out
- Such dissertations will tend to be frozen out of
the top journals and jobs.
- Editors and referees can resort to any manner of
excuse, including that freedom, voluntary,
etc. are illusory concepts.
- If necessary, they will revert to dogmas that
obscure the coercive nature of government and the
collective foolishness of democracy.
85Deep Groupthink in Economics
- Model-mindedness annihilates two key features of
real-world economic processes
- Diverse interpretation of the situation
- The open-ended concept of freedom
- Model-mindedness annihilates the crucial
arguments for freedom based on discovery and
entrepreneurship. The entrepreneur has been
eradicated from mainstream economics.
86Deep Groupthink in Sociology
- Code-words for governmentalization society,
social, solidarity, community,
cooperation.
- Code-words for freedom the market,
competition, neo-liberalism.
87What is to be done?
- By whom?
- By the groupthinkers themselves
- Correct thyself
- Be more classical liberal.
88Janis
-
- If the members agree that loyalty to their
group and its goals requires rigorous support of
the groups primary commitment to open-minded
scrutiny of new evidence and willingness to admit
errors (as in a group committed to the ideals of
scientific research), the usual psychological
tendency to recommit themselves to their past
decisions after a setback can give way to a
careful reappraisal of the wisdom of their past
judgments. The group norm in such a case inclines
them to compare their policy with alternative
courses of action and may lead them to reverse
their earlier decisions (113).
89- Hire more classical liberals
- How?
- Institutional models
- Affirmative-action Check an ideology box?
- Property rights within depts (Stephen Balch)
- Create new departments
- Create campus institutes
90What is to be done?
- By classical liberal scholars
- Challenge Aim your quill at royalty
- Justify skepticism, independent thought, doubt
- Army of Davidsthe Internet
- Believe in the long-run benefits of awareness of
groupthink pitfalls and biases
- Bargain Shake hands with the establishment
- Be willing to be a domesticated dissenter
(Janis 115-116, 257)
91What is to be done?
- By public officials, citizens, voters
- Reduce tax-payer support of academia.
- De-governmentalize.
- Make it so that professors have to persuade
private parties to support them.
92Recap
- We presuppose that classical liberalism is
enlightened.
- The lack of classical liberalism among h/ss
faculty has been interpreted as groupthink
93- Although groupthink has traditionally been
applied to small groups of policy makers, many of
the differences are mitigated by the major
groupthink mechanisms in academia.
94- Micro decisions
- Majoritarian departmental politics
- tends to make each department ideologically
uniform.
95- Macro norms and values
- The professional pyramid
- Once an ideological type gains control over the
apex, it makes the entire pyramid that way.
96- Social democrats gained control of the elite
departments, sweeping social democrats into
nearly every job throughout the discipline.
97- Majoritarian departmental politics and the
professional pyramid resemble and lead to some of
the groupthink tendencies found in small
policy-making groups.