"For 100% free public education – General Strike!" |
French
students are out of the classroom and back on the street. On Thursday, 29th
January, students and teaching staff joined in the national strike that had an
estimated 2.5 million French workers marching in the major cities to prove to
President Sarkozy that his provocative remark in the summer of 2007- ‘These
days, when there’s a strike in France, nobody notices,’ was as wrong as it was
rash. In the afternoon of the same day 53 out of France’s 85-odd universities
voted to continue their own strike indefinitely. Ten days later they show no
signs of backing down, with up to 74 universities now affected and the action
due to carry on until at least the 11th. French students are angry, and they’re
determined that this year, everyone will notice.
There’s
nothing new about the universities going on strike. In November and December
2007, students also joined the wave of national strikes, and many universities
were blockaded for up to four weeks to stop plans to fund universities
privately. In March 2006 many students occupied their campuses as part of
national protest against the proposed ‘Contrat Première Embauche’, the ‘First
Employment Contract’ that threatened young workers’ rights. ‘We’re used to it,’
says Louis, a third-year music student at Université François Rabelais, Tours.
‘Last year the strikes led to my university being blockaded and disrupted weeks
of class. But I’m here today because we have to draw a line somewhere.’
So what makes this year different? The reforms now on the table
are named after the Minister for Higher Education, Valérie Pécresse, and they
will primarily affect students on France’s prestigious teacher training course,
the CAPES [Le Certificat d’Aptitude au Professorat de l’Enseignement du Second degré,
the teacher-training programme for secondary-level teachers]
The Pécresse reforms plan to reduce CAPES funding significantly, by shortening
the two year programme to one year, stopping the year’s paid work experience,
and forcing CAPES students to share lectures with Masters’ students of their
discipline in order to reduce teaching time.
These
measures will bring an estimated 900 job losses in the higher education sector,
and threaten the status of the researcher/lecturers who remain. Many will have
to give closer accounts of the way their research time is spent, and could face
increased teaching time of up to a hundred per cent. ‘They’re not just
threatening our positions as researchers, but the capacity of the university to
give all students an education backed up by up-to-date, fresh research,’ says
L.R., Professor of Sociology, Aix en Provence.
The
longer-term effects of the Pécresse reforms will be to devalue teachers in
secondary education. The CAPES has always made sure that only the number of
teachers needed in schools pass the course each year. The reforms will turn
this carefully controlled system into a free market, with some teachers worse
qualified than others and therefore more vulnerable to attacks on their job
status by the state, which will surely be the government’s next move.
Teachers
and students have come together with unprecedented solidarity to oppose the
Pécresse laws. Since November 6th, one-day walk-outs and
demonstrations across the country have shown an unusual level of inter-faculty
and inter-university cooperation. Teaching staff in many universities voted
through an administrative strike, meaning marks are withheld from students. The
movement has been reported widely in both local and national press, but the
government has shown no recognition and until now university presidencies have
remained equally unhelpful.
Now
general assemblies in every university have voted to up the ante. Around 50% of
university-level classes were cancelled in France last week. And this year the
dominant aim is to spread the word. Meetings in Tours’ Université Francois
Rabelais, where every faculty except music and medicine is on strike, tend to
focus on methods of gaining support and ensuring eventual victory, rather than
on just stopping the university from working. Although the main student unions
such as UNEF and SUD Etudiant
are clearly present, and the campaign has the support of France’s 5 main union
confederations, every decision is taken by a general vote by students and
staff, usually following, but not necessarily in agreement with, a teaching
staff vote.
Last
year, even in this traditionally very radical university, the only way to make
the strike effective was to block the entrances to university buildings. This
year many teachers and students are supporting strike action for the first
time, and general assemblies are filling 1000-capacity auditoria to bursting
point. Everyone wants to be involved in voting through actions, distributing
leaflets or just finding out up-to-date news on the movement’s progress across
the country.
Also
new this year is the involvement of the Tours Institut Universitaire de
Technologie (IUT) in the movement. The IUTs, French technical and vocational
universities, not unlike our old polytechnics, face having their entire budget
diverted into the ‘real’ universities to allocate as they wish, a move that is
certain to leave them out of pocket. Although they rarely strike, they are
currently joining many university protests and look likely to schedule strikes
for one or two days next week in many cities.
At
the beginning of the second-week of strike action the movement is becoming more
and more organised. Alternative classes in activism and discussions on how the
universities can be improved are taking place in university class-rooms. ‘We’re
not just fighting a reform but a whole system,’ explains Clarisse, 19, a
first-year psychology student. ‘A huge accumulation of frustration has
contributed to a universal rallying of students right across the country. We’re
fighting a type of politics that tries to conquer by dividing people, but last
week was the beginning of a inter-union movement.’
The
power of the strike is already beginning to show its effects. Many university
presidencies have now declared their opposition to the Pécresse reforms,
despite most not giving their formal support to strikers. In Tours the
President has consented to a formal day of protest for Tuesday 10th
February, when massive crowds are expected to rally in Paris. Surely the
government will soon be forced to admit that strikes in France do not go
unnoticed- in the past they have brought down governments.
Sarkozy
has received at least one message he can’t ignore- the national newspaper
Libération reports that on Monday, 2nd February in a private meeting
with heads of Paris universities, the president was addressed by Axel Kahn,
president of Paris V University and well-known scientist: ‘Mr. President of the
Republic, you will not succeed in passing this decree.’ Sarkozy
has already proved himself a slow learner when it comes to listening to the
French public- meanwhile, university activism is just getting more organised
and more powerful.