Contents:
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: After the War
Chapter 2: Washington, 1983: The National Agenda
Chapter 3: The Rules of Change I: Matters of Policy and Politics
Chapter 4: The Rules of Change II: Matters of Principle
Chapter 5: Facing the Future: The Capacity to Govern
Chapter 6: Facing the Future II: The Decade Ahead
Chapter 7: The Challenge to Leadership
Afterword to the Paperback Edition
Index
Research universities are unique in American education in the degree to which they are sensitive to policies of the national government. According to Robert Rosenzweig, it is impossible to understand the recent past, the present, and the future of the university without understanding the political process that determines those policiesincluding the various ways universities have tried, with mixed results, to shape them to their own ends. In The Political University, the former Stanford administrator and president of the Association of American Universities offers an insider's perspective on research universities, the AAU, and the Washington political agenda. Drawing on thirty years of professional experience, Rosenzweig discusses the problems and prospects of American research universities in light of such issues as shifting federal policies, resource constraints, increased partnerships with business and industry, and the changing needs and perceptions of the larger society. His book also brings other valuable perspectives to the discussionthose of twelve former university presidents, all of whom served through the 1980s, all of whom left office around 1990 for various reasons, and none of whom will ever hold a presidency again. This edition contains a new introduction, which brings some of the issues dealt with in the book into sharper relief. In candid and wide-ranging discussions with Rosenzweig, the former presidents examine the complex political process on which the modern research university dependsand through which the modern university president must lead constituents. ''A very readable and excellent portrait of today's American research university.''Clark Kerr, President Emeritus, University of California