Beaver
Issue 854 | 27.9.16
the
Newspaper of the LSE Students’ Union
LSE Appoints First Female BME University Director
Dame Menat (Minouche) Shafik to take up Directorship on 1st September 2017, with Research Pro-Director Dr Julia Black holding down fort as Interim Director until then, following Director Craig Calhoun’s departure. Greg Sproston Managing Editor DAME NEMAT (MINOUCHE) Shafik has been unveiled as the new Director of the London School of Economics, making her the first female BME Director of the university. Shafik will take up the position in time for the 2017-18 academic year; Professor Julia Black, who has been an LSE academic since 1994 and Pro-Director for Research since 2014, will act as Interim Director for this academic year. Despite the LSE’s reputation as a world leader in the social sciences, it has been criticised in the past for the apparent disconnect between its innovative, impactful research on inequality, and its internal administrative processes which, for some at laest, have not been satisfactorally progressive. Through this lens, Shafik’s appointment has been greeted with enthusiasm by the majority of the LSE community, with many students and alumni feeling that the LSE acting on its own academic advice is long overdue. There is also broad consensus that the new Director better represents the diverse nature of the LSE student body. Additionally, many students are impressed with the breadth and depth of Dr. Shafik’s experience; the incoming Director currently serves as a Bank of England (BoE) Deputy Governor and sits on its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). Prior to this role, her positions have been diverse and varied, blending a mix of academic and professional; she has served as Permanent Secretary to the Department for
International Development, was the youngest Vice President of the World Bank, and has lectured or taught at Georgetown, Wharton and Oxford. Speaking to The Beaver, LSESU Education Officer Jasmina Bidé stated, ‘I am very excited by Minouche Shafik’s appointment to the role of Director, not least because I think that it will provide greater stability to the LSE. It is of course also great to have such a highly qualified and well-experienced person as the head of the School - equally important is that she has had experience both in academia and in the professional world. As an African, it warms my heart to have a woman of African descent at the helm of LSE. Finally, I hope that the fact that she is an alumni means that she will be better attuned to what it means to be a student at the LSE, and that student experience and education will be at the forefront of her tenure. It is unfortunate that Calhoun was unable to satisfactorily direct the LSE, but hopefully we have turned a page and our School will continue to improve in the coming years.’ Jasmina’s comments on Calhoun are largely reflective of the opinions of students. The former Director is a very respected figure in Sociology who has contributed to the progressivist approach of using social science to solve the world’s most pressing issues; yet there was always the nagging feeling he did not have the non-academic experience or nous to successfully discharge the more administrative demands of his position. Calhoun’s tenure was marked by the school falling down The Guardian’s Complete University Guide on the back of
declining student satisfaction, and the Director was typically the lightning rod for dissatisfied students. As Jasmina notes, students are generally hopeful that Shafik’s status as an LSE alumna will ensure she takes the frustrations and concerns of students more seriously, but not all students are entirely convinced her past experiences should be seen as a benefit. Undergraduate student Josh Hardman stated on social media, ‘Really conflicted, struggling to work out how I feel about this. Excited to see an Egyptian woman appointed to the role, for sure. But, there’s something inherently unnerving about someone who was deputy governor for the BoE, and more strikingly: deputy MD for the IMF.’ Academic critiques of the IMF’s heavy-handed approach to developing nations are mainstays in a number of LSE reading lists. According to the BoE, as a Deputy Governor there, Shafik was responsible for leading the ‘design and execution of quantitative easing by the MPC.’ The BoE’s own analysis in the Distributional Effects of Asset Purchases Report 2012, showed that the richest 5% of Britain’s population had gained most from QE - a stark contrast to the LSE’s mission to reduce inequality in the UK and abroad. Regardless, there are obvious differences between Calhoun and Shafik, and the decision represents a significant change of thinking by senior management. This appointment definitively marks the start of a new chapter for the LSE. Shafik. Photo Credit: Wikimedia, 2009.
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