Why
Italy's 50,000 university teachers should be sacked
Domenico
Pacitti replies to Katarina Björnstjerna in Göteborg, Sweden
- Dear
Domenico,
-
One of our national newspapers has quoted you as a leading authority on
Italian corruption. It quotes you as saying that Italy's university
professors deserve to be sacked and even imprisoned. Can you say more about
this? I have just been accepted for a student exchange programme in Naples
and am a bit concerned. Two friends who have just returned from a similar
project in Rome told me that although there were some problems with crowded
lectures and bad organisation, the actual teaching they received wasn't too
bad. Were they just lucky? What advice can you give me?
- ––
Katarina Björnstjerna, Göteborg, Sweden
- Dear
Katarina,
-
The reason why Italy's university teachers deserve to be sacked and
prosecuted has nothing to do with their teaching ability or academic
competence. While it is true that many of them are conspicuously deficient
in both areas, that is not the reason. They deserve to be sacked and
prosecuted because they are flagrantly corrupt and are corrupting successive
generations of students through their corrupt example. The corruption I am
talking about has nothing to do with bribing policemen or judges. It has to
do with the conscious promotion of a system which has no place for truth,
merit, moral integrity and intellectual honesty –
the sort of values that are commonly associated with bona fide
universities such as you have in Sweden. Not only does the Italian
university system have no place for these values but it actually discourages
and even punishes those who attempt to uphold them. In this sense the very
soul of Italian academia is corrupt.
-
The key to understanding how the system operates is to observe how tenured
university posts are allocated in Italy. It
has long been common knowledge within Italian academia that such posts can
only be gained through underhand recommendations based on an ingrained
Machiavellian, Mafia-style exchange-of-favour mentality. Only candidates who
can be counted on to play the corrupt game and return favours are admitted,
which gives you an idea of the sort of person you're dealing with:
weak-willed, unprincipled and susceptible to corruption. This means that the
teachers who will be teaching you when you come to Italy will have been
hand-picked not for their academic merit, moral integrity or intellectual
honesty, but for very different reasons. You should remember that those
university teachers who do have some academic merit were admitted not
because of that merit but in spite of it.
-
One
consequence of this corruption is that generations of deserving candidates,
many of whom from poor families that have made enormous sacrifices for their
children's education, have been denied their due. The less astute candidates
believe the severe judgements pronounced against their academic merit and
designed to punish them for having had the audacity to apply for the post
and to discourage them from ever re-applying. Another obvious consequence of
this corruption is that students enrolling at university are exposed to
perverse models in their teachers and are denied a genuine academic
atmosphere in which truth and integrity have a value.
-
The last
official count shows that at the start of 2003 there were 18,131 professori
ordinari (almost a one-third increase since 1997 despite economic
cutbacks), 18,502 professori associati (also on the increase) and
20,900 ricercatori (fairly static). If you add them up, that makes
57,533 tenured teachers, or better, parasites supported by taxpayers' money,
at 77 Italian universities who should be sacked and criminally prosecuted –
all save perhaps a dozen who have made some sort of real effort to denounce
the system.
Note that I am not using the English word professor to translate the
Italian professore since the latter is totally lacking in the moral
and ethical presuppositions contained in the former.
-
You may be wondering why they should all be sacked if not all of them serve
on the examining commissions which unlawfully assign posts to recommended
candidates. Well the answer is that it is simply not credible that the rest
are unaware of the situation. By doing nothing, by failing to report the
corruption they automatically become accomplices in corruption. Such crucial
failure to act is called omesso rapporto in Italian law and
incidentally finds a parallel in the national Roman Catholic religion under sins
of omission.
-
All of which is certainly a far cry from your Swedish universities. My
advice to you on meeting an academic from an Italian university is to
envisage an invisible placard attached to his or her forehead with the
words: "I too got my job dishonestly." Your first question should
be: "What have you personally done to expose and combat Italian
university corruption?" Always remember – these people are natural
actors who are past masters in the art of deception.
-
Italy is a holiday country with much to offer in the way of beauty and dolce
vita. But forget Italian universities, which deserve that title only by
courtesy and have nothing whatsoever to offer young minds in search of
genuine teaching.
July 23 2004
Note: This
article was published for the first time by JUST Response on July 23
2004.
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