“Open this book and meet on the very first page, Jerry Beyer, a working-class man, trained every step of the way through Catholic education to becoming a professor at two Catholic universities, who raises some heart-felt, unflappable questions about whether Catholic mission is compromised by the corporate model that it has made its own. In this book, Beyer brings to the new field of university ethics the case of the Catholic Colleges and Universities, asking are they practicing what they teach: are Catholic lessons of worker solidarity evident in their treatment of adjuncts, is gender equity for the books or for the administrative offices, is racial justice a dream or a campus reality, and if the church's mission is to break the cycle of poverty, why are so many of the poor and working class unable to get into the Catholic schools? It is not an indictment, but a compelling plea to make mission drive the model. Bravo, Jerry!” —James F. Keenan, S.J., author of
University Ethics: How Colleges Can Build and Benefit from a Culture of Ethics
“Campuses across the country are reckoning with their histories of inequality ranging from institutional racism to largely serving wealthy white students. This reckoning is made even more challenging by the larger neoliberal or corporatized environment that renders the enterprise to new forms of inequality such as exploitive labor and investment practices. Catholic institutions are not immune to and have participated in the same inequalities historically and currently.
Just Universities highlights how Catholic institutions have followed the patterns of inequality within the larger enterprise of higher education and even created even further inequalities for LGBTQ faculty, staff and students as well as gender inequalities that are even often more pronounced.
Just Universities is packed with data, a synthesis of multitudes of sources, personal anecdotes, and philosophical ponderings that are thoughtfully and carefully assembled to expose these challenges and also create the case for Catholic higher education to use its own teaching to match its aspirations for being socially just.
Just Universities is compelling in making the case and inspirational in its call to action.” —Adrianna Kezar, Wilbur Kieffer Endowed Professor and Dean's Professor of Leadership, University of Southern California, Director of the Pullias Center (pullias.usc.edu), and Director of the Delphi Project
“In
Just Universities, Jerry Beyer presents a remarkable analysis of the relationship between Catholic institutions of higher education and Catholic social teaching that will set the framework for all future explorations of the relationship between these two realms of the Catholic experience and tradition. Beyer’s choice of issues to examine are pointed and timely, and his analysis is both theoretically sophisticated and practically relevant. Some of the topics he explores are at the forefront of the current dialogue: the ‘corporatization’ of Catholic higher education; just wages; the status of adjunct faculty; unionization of faculty; institutional financial investments; environmental and climate justice; and issues of inclusion based on race, gender, sexual identity, and class, among others.
Just Universities is a must-read for all engaged in these critical issues. As a Catholic college president, I am indebted to Beyer for what he has provided to those in positions of leadership. His analysis should be the framework for all future discussions on these topics, and higher education should be most grateful for Beyer’s contribution.” —James A. Donahue, President of St. Mary’s College of California
&ls\dquo;Just Universities is a must read for all faculty and administrators.” —
Collegium
“[A] pioneering, much-needed book... This book is essential reading for anyone interested in university ethics and religious higher education ...” —
Anglican Theological Review
“Just Universities is sure to become a seminal text for future research and discussions on this topic and will be a valuable addition to library collections at all colleges and universities, secular as well as religious. Highly Recommended.” —Choice