Abstract
In this conceptual contribution to the study of university governance the authors will approach potential patterns of behavior of key decision-makers at central university level, i.e. roles of governance actors, as well as the set of factors that shape and constrain the governance actor’s room of manoevre and provide avenues to explain varying role enactments through an actor analysis of members of the newly introduced university boards. In a first part the introduction and empowerment of university boards in European higher education institutions is described as a building block of the transformation of university governance. In the second part the main hypothesis derived is that, in governance practice, board members enact roles which are not only shaped and constrained by formal institutions, as given by the organizational context and regulatory structure, but also by conformable, appropriate and legitimate role expectations of central role senders. As a showcase analysis, the roles of university board members are conceptually explored. Especially in the context of recent reform processes, board members who tend to have a varied status set, very often find themselves in a troubling situation of conflicting role expectations, leading to high levels of role conflicts and role ambiguity. It is the aim of this paper to sketch and examine the factors that contribute to the different roles university board members may take.
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Notes
E.g. in North-Rhine-Westfalia and Baden-Württemberg.
Pearce and Zahra (1991 as quoted in Pettigrew 1992) suggest that boards through their external members acting in the interest of the organization provide business contacts and thus contribute to the overall performance of the company. From the perspective of shareholders, boards are regarded as necessary to ensure the protection of shareholder interest.
One of the exceptions are Austrian university boards (De Boer et al. 2010).
An analogous empirical study is currently being conducted by the authors to provide for empirical results.
There are, of course, exceptions to this rule, e.g. U.K. universities.
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Acknowledgments
This paper has been developed within the EUROHESC framework in the Collaborative Research Project: “Transforming Universities in Europe” (TRUE). We are grateful to the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and the European Science Foundation (ESF) for their support. We would also like to thank our project partners, the editors of the special issue and the reviewers for their critical assessments of our drafts. Finally, we extend our gratitude to Ms. Yemisrach Negash and Ms. Katharina Stenzel for their outstanding support in the preparation of this paper.
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Kretek, P.M., Dragšić, Ž. & Kehm, B.M. Transformation of university governance: on the role of university board members. High Educ 65, 39–58 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-012-9580-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-012-9580-x