Indiana University鈥檚 just-retired president, Michael McRobbie, sees his success in enacting a vaccine mandate as showing a possible path forward for US higher education leaders stymied by the nation鈥檚 wide partisan divide.
Professor McRobbie聽stepped down this summer聽after 14 years leading the flagship university in one of the nation鈥檚 most politically conservative states, just before a first-in-the-nation court ruling聽upheld his mandate.
In an interview, Professor McRobbie acknowledged the fierce opposition that such Covid vaccine requirements have generated in Indiana and other conservative parts of the US.聽However, he said he spent years cultivating relationships with lawmakers that have helped defuse animosities.
鈥淚t certainly takes effort, and you certainly have to keep at it,鈥 said Professor McRobbie, a native of Australia who spent 24 years in senior leadership positions at Indiana.
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Yet some other university leaders across the US, despite determined efforts, have not been so fortunate in pushing back a rising tide of partisan fighting and conservative rejection of scientific expertise.
They include W. Joseph King, who聽聽as president of Lyon College in Arkansas, and Rick MacLennan, who聽聽as president of North Idaho College, both under ideological pressure from the conservative communities around them. F. King Alexander left the presidency of Louisiana State University 耻苍诲别谤听similar circumstances聽in 2019.
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Professor McRobbie credited his long tenure 鈥 more than twice the聽average for US university presidents,聽and in a state that voted overwhelmingly for Donald Trump in the 2020 election 鈥 to strategies that included wide consultation with consistent emphasis on the institutional mission.
The university鈥檚 battle to require Covid vaccinations for all students, faculty and staff was ultimately decided in federal court rulings. But the state鈥檚 Republican governor and lawmakers, after some emphatic criticisms, ultimately backed away from threats to keep fighting it.
Professor McRobbie said he laid the groundwork by creating panels of top medical experts at the university who met regularly to set out approaches and rationales for handling the pandemic. It was part of a broader pattern of engaging directly with lawmakers, trustees and other potential critics on looming controversies, he told聽探花视频.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 ignore them,鈥 he said of state lawmakers. 鈥淎nd, in fact, just the opposite 鈥 it makes a lot of sense to be able to seriously embrace them, work with them and try and make them understand what you鈥檙e trying to achieve, and then at the same time, try to understand what concerns they have. Because I think they have legitimate concerns from time to time.鈥
Some US university leaders, however, have encountered especially antagonistic governing boards, often appointed by state governors and lawmakers with agendas reflecting a nationwide trend of prioritising partisanship.
Dr MacLennan is facing that at North Idaho, where the board blocked his attempt at a campus-wide mask mandate. This year鈥檚 most notorious case is likely the board at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, which lost Pulitzer Prize winner Nikole Hannah-Jones as a journalism professor by聽repeatedly refusing to confirm聽her tenured appointment.
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鈥淚 suppose I was lucky and grateful that I had trustees who on the whole聽understood the mission聽of the university,鈥 Professor McRobbie said. 鈥淭hey might have very different views about exactly what direction we should go and priorities and things like that, but we were always able to agree on a common purpose and a common direction.鈥
One bigger-picture insight that may have underpinned that success, Professor McRobbie said, was a $200 million (拢140 million) 鈥済rand challenges鈥 programme aimed at Indiana鈥檚 poorer communities. It involves university leaders visiting such areas of the state to point out major problems needing attention and hearing the thoughts of local residents on what should be done about them.
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That鈥檚 led to dedicated research efforts on matters that include adapting to climate change and combating drug addiction, he said.
Others have tried similar things elsewhere. They include Marlene Tromp, the president of Boise State University, who, like Dr MacLennan, has felt Idaho鈥檚 political pressure and sense of alienation from higher education. In response, she has聽created outposts聽in small Idaho towns where students get online instruction boosted by faculty stationed locally to help them.
The effort at Indiana has 鈥渂een very successful for us鈥, Professor McRobbie said. 鈥淭he whole goal is: how can the university help the left-behind communities 鈥 whether it鈥檚 economically left behind or left behind racially.鈥
In retirement, Professor McRobbie is not leaving Bloomington. The trustees gave him the honorary title of university chancellor 鈥 just the third such instance in Indiana鈥檚 history 鈥 and he expects to keep working in areas that include cultivating donors.
And just two months after departing the Indiana presidency, he found himself speaking bluntly about his victory on vaccines and the general problem of conservative states blocking basic public health measures.
There is little reason,聽听颈苍听Science聽magazine, 鈥渇or the political hue of a state to deter universities, as citadels of science and reason, from making every attempt to implement vaccine mandates鈥.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Newly retired Indiana president sees path out of partisan division
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