Academic tenure

"Tenure" redirects here. For land ownership, see Land tenure. For the 2009 film, see Tenure (film).

A tenured professor has an appointment that lasts until retirement age, except for dismissal with just cause. A common justification for existence of such a privileged position is the principle of academic freedom, which holds that it is beneficial for state, society and academy in the long run if scholars are free to examine, hold, and advance controversial views without fear of dismissal from their jobs.

Some have argued that modern tenure systems actually diminish academic freedom, forcing those seeking tenured positions to profess conformance to the same views (political and academic) as those awarding the tenured professorships. According to physicist Lee Smolin, "...it is practically career suicide for a young theoretical physicist not to join the field [of string theory]."[1] However, in institutions without tenure systems, academic freedom and the ability to espouse non-conformist views are afforded no protections. Tenure has enabled some academics, such as the American professor Noam Chomsky, to espouse controversial positions.

See also

References

  1. The Trouble with Physics, Lee Smolin

Further reading

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