Texas A&M announces sweeping changes to its Qatar campus
Texas A&M University will move ahead with controversial changes to its branch campus in Qatar, including shifting arts-and-sciences faculty to instruction-only positions with no research role.
The plan, announced in a memo to faculty and staff members by Texas A&M’s president M. Katherine Banks, largely echoes a reorganization proposal put forward last year by the dean of the Qatar campus, César Malavé. The restructuring effort was criticized by faculty members in both Qatar and College Station, and a review committee appointed by the provost recommended against the changes.
Banks said the new plan reflects the mission of the Persian Gulf campus, which was established nearly 20 years ago to offer engineering degrees. “The goal is to center our academic structure around our degree-granting programs,” Banks wrote in the memo, adding that the current system “does not prioritize the unique role of the degree-granting units and therefore does not allow for efficient use of resources.”
Faculty members have argued that their research deepens their teaching, and that the campus’s liberal-arts foundation adds value to the engineering degrees it awards.
The plan also removes oversight and review of faculty members in Qatar from their corresponding departments on the main campus. Instead, the Qatar campus dean will be responsible for decisions on hiring, retention, promotion, and annual reviews, although he may choose to consult other deans, the memo said.
In addition, the restructuring ends rolling contracts for professors. Faculty members in engineering will receive fixed-term contracts of up to five years, while those for instructional faculty members will be renewed on an annual basis. Rolling contracts had acted somewhat like tenure for professors in Qatar, giving them longer-term job security and preventing them from being fired without cause.
Going forward, no new rolling contracts will be issued, the memo said, and existing ones will end as of September 2026. The other changes will begin on September 1.
A committee of professors and administrators appointed earlier this year to assess the proposed revisions had recommended that faculty members remain in research positions and that evaluations and promotion decisions continue to be made jointly by program leaders in Qatar and on the main campus. The Texas A&M Faculty Senate passed a resolution urging Banks to support the committee’s recommendations.
Dale Rice, an instructional associate professor of journalism and speaker of the Faculty Senate, said he was disappointed in Banks’s decision, which comes on the heels of a home-campus reorganization that created a single arts-and-sciences college. “This is one more piece of a growing body of evidence that shared governance is not a priority at Texas A&M,” he said.
A university spokeswoman noted that Banks has the authority to make such changes under college administrative procedures.
Still, overseas branch campuses established in conjunction with a foreign partner complicate such governance debates. The Qatar Foundation, which underwrites the cost of the Qatar campus, included a number of key performance indicators related to engineering research and local economic impact in a recent contract renewal with Texas A&M.
The president of the foundation’s higher-education arm previously told The Chronicle that the organization had not asked for the reorganization. In her memo, however, Banks cited the importance of meeting performance indicators set by the Qataris.
Balancing the goals of American campuses and their overseas partners can be challenging. Last year, the National University of Singapore announced it was ending its collaboration with Yale University to start Yale-NUS College, a liberal-arts institution. In defending Yale-NUS’s closure, Singapore’s education minister noted that such partnerships “evolve and mature” and some come to a “natural end.”
Joseph Daniel Ura, a Texas A&M political science professor on temporary assignment to Qatar, said the announced changes will weaken the ties between the Qatar campus and the main campus. Research and hiring and promotion will now be handled very differently in Qatar, and Ura, who has tenure, said he worries about protections for academic freedom. The Middle East campus “is no longer a branch campus in a meaningful way anymore. It’s not a meaningful extension of what goes on in Texas,” he said. “It’s more like a co-branded institution.”
Meanwhile, faculty members in Qatar are asking what comes next. One professor, who asked not to be identified because of the uncertainty, said she was dismayed by the abrupt shift of arts-and-sciences faculty members to instructor roles. Although Banks had been expected to make a decision, the announcement comes just a couple of weeks before the start of the new semester.
Her colleagues’ positions will change before they even have a chance to go on the academic job market, the faculty member said, predicting that most professors would soon be looking for a job or considering an early retirement. “This is an absolute betrayal of TAMUQ’s faculty,” she said.