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The Rise of the Social Sciences

August 21, 2006

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Who's up and who's down?

At any campus or disciplinary gathering, you can find professors swapping gossip about which department lost a faculty line and which one gained. Another loss for the humanities. More growth at the business school. Another physicist replaced with a biologist. And so forth.

But what's the big picture of all of these changes? A new book attempts to add up all of the shifts over the course of the 20th century, all over the world. For humanities professors who regularly complain that science professors are favored, there may be a surprise: Humanities faculty jobs have indeed lost ground, steadily and dramatically. But during the 20th century -- the age when Einstein and Salk and countless other scientists changed the way we live -- the share of science jobs in academe actually fell slightly. The big winner was in fact the social sciences. And more generally, disciplines that focused on applied work saw gains while those focused on basic research fell.

These are the findings of Restructuring the University: Worldwide Shifts in Academia in the 20th Century, just published by Stanford University Press. The authors are two sociologists -- David John Frank, an associate professor at the University of California at Irvine, and Jay Gabler, who is currently finishing his Ph.D. at Harvard University. For their work, they mined a series of worldwide directories of faculty members that were created during World War I, in part out of the idea that sharing knowledge would promote peace.

Some directories, like the Index Generalis, were truly worldwide. But that publication didn't continue throughout the 20th century. So the authors focused many of their comparative findings on the Commonwealth Universities Yearbook, which has been published regularly since 1914. While the British Commonwealth nations are of course a subset of the world, they include countries in every region and a mix of developing and developed nations. The authors also say that they found evidence that the trends in the commonwealth nations are by no means unique to them -- and apply in the United States and elsewhere. The authors say that while they were not able to do country-by-country analysis, the trends in the British Commonwealth were not skewed by any subset of those countries (such as developing nations).

The overall results, looking at changes over decades to minimize yearly fluctuations, are dramatic.

Shifts in Faculty Jobs, by Disciplinary Category, in British Commonwealth

  Faculty %, 1915-35 Faculty %, 1975-95 Change Over Time
Humanities 33.2 19.5 -41%
Natural Sciences 57.5 50.6 -12%
Social Sciences 9.3 29.9 +222%

Within the humanities, the magnitude of the long-term losses vary across disciplines, with the most basic disciplines appearing to be particularly vulnerable.

Share of Faculty Jobs in Humanities Disciplines, in British Commonwealth

Discipline % of All Faculty Slots, 1915-35 % of All Faculty Slots, 1975-95 Change Over Time
Classics and Archaeology 4.5 0.6 -87%
Philosophy 2.8 0.8 -71%
Theology 4.3 1.7 -60%
Art and Music 1.3 0.8 -38%
Linguistics and Philology 0.8 0.5 -37%
Western Languages and Literature 7.3 4.7 -36%
History 3.5 3.0 -14%
Non-Western Languages and Literature 2.3 2.0 -13%

Frank said in an interview that the idea for the book came to him when he stumbled on some of the old worldwide directories of faculty members while he was doing research in the archives at Stanford's education school. "It seemed we had this amazing resource to document these trends."

At the time, Frank was teaching at Harvard, where Gabler joined the effort. "People frequently comment on the decline of the humanities, but less on what is rising," Gabler said. "The common presumption is that what is gaining is the natural sciences, but what is taking up most of the slack is the social sciences."

Frank said that there are important implications for the findings, across disciplines. First, he said it was important for people to recognize that they are dealing with worldwide, long-term shifts, not just changes that are cyclical or the results of one administrator's likes or dislikes.

A big part of the rise of the social sciences, he said, is the practical emphasis within those disciplines. So if you look within disciplines, you'll find the most pronounced shifts away from those with the least practical emphases. "The locus of these shifts is that knowledge, instead of being rarified and located in the inaccessible reaches of the heavens, is located in the person. It's democratized," Frank said. "It's about the decline of masters and the rise of mastery."

In a language or literature department, he said, faculty slots are shifting away from "the genius of Shakespeare" (or any great author) and toward "actor-centric activity." with the student as actor. "The winner here is to teach people to speak everyday language to themselves, to write poetry or novels or journals or whatever. The new master is the individual."

Gabler said that many of the shifts decried in academe today (such as commercialization) may be seen in a new "democratizing" light in the context of their findings. "The opening of the university to various commercial and other interest groups is another manifestation of that shift. It's easy to say that a  university president should turn down the (hypothetical) big corporate grant and distribute his/her institution's resources and  faculty composition differently, but who is to decide where the resources should go?"

He added, "Someone has to decide, and the same paradigm shift that has taken us from political philosophy -- reading Plato and Hume, a couple of men seen to be especially wise -- to political science (polling a random sample of citizens, all of  whom are seen to have something to say that's worth scholars'  listening to) has made this a world in which it is generally seen to be only right and good for the man (or woman) at the top to be responsive to outside influences of various sorts, rather than hewing  to a particular historical or philosophical vision of what ought to be happening inside university walls."

One result of that shift is that "no longer is it necessarily more prestigious to endow a chair in English literature or Roman law than to endow a chair in computer science or psychology or business or bioengineering," he said.

Advance readers offering praise of the book include Gerhard Casper, president emeritus at Stanford, who said that the work surprised him and makes it "more than plausible to think of universities as constituents of a worldwide republic of learning."

To the extent that some in the academy will not like the book's conclusions (as seems inevitable once it starts distribution), Frank urged them to be open not only to the discussion of whether the changes are good or bad, but the worldwide nature of the transformations. That's something that suggests the strength behind the changes, he said, whether or not they are desirable.

"We are making an argument that global cultural change is a driving factor behind change in the university," he said.

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Comments on The Rise of the Social Sciences

  • Posted by Stephen Downes on August 21, 2006 at 7:00am EDT
  • As I read this article, the author is explaining that the shift in emphasis at the university, from sciences and humanities to social sciences, is caused by increased funding by business.

    “The opening of the university to various commercial and other interest groups is another manifestation of that shift. It’s easy to say that a university president should turn down the (hypothetical) big corporate grant and distribute his/her institution’s resources and faculty composition differently, but who is to decide where the resources should go?”

    He is then justifying this shift as a democratizing of the domains of enquiry.

    “The locus of these shifts is that knowledge, instead of being rarified and located in the inaccessible reaches of the heavens, is located in the person. It’s democratized,” Frank said. “It’s about the decline of masters and the rise of mastery.”

    However, this justification is attained only by stretching any commonsense definition of the disciplines in question beyond recognition.

    "...the same paradigm shift that has taken us from political philosophy — reading Plato and Hume, a couple of men seen to be especially wise — to political science (polling a random sample of citizens, all of whom are seen to have something to say that’s worth scholars’ listening to)."

    I would find it very odd to find a political science program that does not discuss Plato or Hume. And I would find it odder still to find a philosophy program that does not extend its enquiry into the nature of probability and statistics.

    Though perhaps there is some purpose to telling us that business prefers to fund avenues of enquiry that are 'more democratic', there is no evidence of such a trend, certainly not in this article.

  • bad social science
  • Posted by a social scientist on August 21, 2006 at 7:20am EDT
  • Since the social sciences only developed as disciplines in the 19th century, its not really surprising that their share of faculty lines would increase through the 20th century and that the relative share of faculty positions held by the humanities and physical and biological sciences would decline. Moreover, pesenting these trends for broad categories like the 'humanities' or 'sciences' obscures war are undoubtedly very real shifts within these categories. I haven't read the book, but I trust they disentangle these data further; the findings presented in the review are just not that earth-shattering.

  • Seems to be a revolution
  • Posted by mgk on August 21, 2006 at 9:15am EDT
  • If the rise in social science representation at universities and the comparable decline in humanities are not revolutionary and have only to do with dividing up the academic pie, why have basic sciences not declined more equitably?

  • Clarification or Occlusion?
  • Posted by A K M Adam , Prof of New Testament at Seabury Western Theological Seminary on August 21, 2006 at 11:25am EDT
  • Just what does the "democratization of knowledge" mean in this peice? I'm willing to extend to the study's authors a degree of charity, since this article doesn't pretend to offer a careful analysis of their results, but even in the puffier context of a journalistic summary, the connection between the results that this article describes and "the democratization of knowledge" remains utterly murky to me.

    Given the very positive ideological heft that "democratizing" anything brings to it, I'd be suspicious that the term is being used as rhetorical MSG, to flavor the results.

  • Economics
  • Posted by RAJEEV BHARATHAN , READER IN ECONOMICS at GOVERNMENT COLLEGE, THRISSUR,INDIA on August 21, 2006 at 2:05pm EDT
  • Students and Parents are interested in the employability of their discipline rather than its relevance and analytical power to study the emerging trends in socio-politico-economic issues.That is why there is a decline in the number of students in social science discipline.This naturally result in the fall in demand for faculty in social sciences.

  • Shifting disciplines
  • Posted by IB on August 23, 2006 at 9:35am EDT
  • I published an article of a similar nature a few years ago and some of my European friends who were funded to study trends in the EU had findings that precisely matched mine in the US. We weren't looking at the change in disciplines in the same way, but we were looking at the changes in how work was being conducted within the disciplines, funding regimes for research within/across disciplines and other basic fundamental issues in paradigm shifts. I whole heartedly agree that there are dramatic shifts going on and would further add that there ought to be.

    Part of the Academic (term used loosely) mission, since the time of the Urs and Summars, has been to support the sanctioned moral authority, economic and political suprasystem of which it is a part. In support of the statement that the social sciences were the last major area to develop; this was much in response to industrialization and the growth of urban populations. The current strong presence of the sciences is also not surprising within the context of the onslaught of worldwide technologies. I have often suggested to my "humanitites" friends that these are some of the issues to which they might want to seriously apply their craft, to approach issues of moral authority, ethics, philosophy, etc., to add enlightenment, rather than necessarily simply critique the fall from their former prominance.

    Frequently, you see these types of aformentioned humanities issues being addressed by practioners of the sciences and social sciences. At least in my experience. So, I am not so sure that there is a drop in work being done in philosophy or humanities in general, as much as a shift in where this work is being conducted, as I myself have appropriated my knowledge in the humanities to apply to my work in technology and the social sciences.

    Hopefully, the book does a better job than the article examining the cross-disciplinary, transdisciplinary, multidisciplinary, and interdisciplinary emergence, which I would suspect is the fastest growing part of actual work being conducted in the of the current academic landscape, even if the "organization lines" have not yet emerged as its complement. In academia, as well as other sectors--work changes at a much faster rate than the traditional political and economic dynamics and boundaries of the organization itself.

    By jove, it good to see that Academia still attempts to remain relevant by being in some type of proportional relationship to its contemporary environment.

    I'm not sure that that I would label this as democratic, but then again, I am sure that I believe it's representative.

  • Posted by Student on September 3, 2006 at 5:10am EDT
  • I would imagine that the defintions of what constitutes each discipline would be under some dispute. Perhaps the problem is that each discipline is not defined. If by "linguistics" the writers mean what goes on in colleges in the US (as far as I know), I'm just not sure how it's a subject in the "humanities" and not the "social sciences." And all of the philosophy of science and social science? And much of history? Are these not social sciences? Hopefully the book explicit defines what is what and at least somewhat justifies its definitions.