Overall Rating | Gold - expired |
---|---|
Overall Score | 67.77 |
Liaison | Andrew Porter |
Submission Date | March 6, 2020 |
University of Cincinnati
PA-3: Inclusive and Participatory Governance
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
2.50 / 3.00 |
Andrew
Porter Director Planning + Design + Constuction |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Part 1. Shared governance bodies
Yes or No | |
Students | Yes |
Academic staff | Yes |
Non-academic staff | Yes |
A brief description of the institution’s formal participatory or shared governance bodies:
UC Student Government is the official representative of all undergraduate students attending the University of Cincinnati. It consists of an elected Student Senate, a cabinet and an executive staff. The Student Government has several standing boards: the Student Activities, University Funding and Student Safety boards. It also has several standing committees: Campus Life, Student Rights and Interests, Academic Affairs, Governmental Affairs and Strategic Planning. For more information - https://www.ucstudentgov.org/.
The Faculty Senate is the representative body through which all faculty can participate in governance. https://www.uc.edu/facultysenate.html There are also three Faculty representatives--including the head of the Faculty Senate, who is elected--who serve on the Board of Trustees. See http://www.uc.edu/trustees/trustees.html
UC also has a newly-established Staff Senate (for non-academic staff) which is an advisory body to the President of the University and University administration. Staff Senate endeavors to have a duly representative and diverse membership with equitable representation among various colleges, divisions and departments.. More information on the staff senate can be found here: https://www.uc.edu/employees/staff-senate.html
The Faculty Senate is the representative body through which all faculty can participate in governance. https://www.uc.edu/facultysenate.html There are also three Faculty representatives--including the head of the Faculty Senate, who is elected--who serve on the Board of Trustees. See http://www.uc.edu/trustees/trustees.html
UC also has a newly-established Staff Senate (for non-academic staff) which is an advisory body to the President of the University and University administration. Staff Senate endeavors to have a duly representative and diverse membership with equitable representation among various colleges, divisions and departments.. More information on the staff senate can be found here: https://www.uc.edu/employees/staff-senate.html
Part 2. Campus stakeholder representation in governance
11
Number of students representing their peers as official members of the institution’s highest governing body:
2
Number of academic staff representing their peers as official members of the institution’s highest governing body:
0
Number of non-academic staff representing their peers as official members of the institution’s highest governing body:
0
Part 3. Gender equity in governance
6
Percentage of official members of the highest governing body that are women:
54.55
Website URL where information about the institution’s highest governing body may be found:
Part 4. Community engagement bodies
Yes
A brief description of the campus-community council or equivalent body that gives external stakeholders a regular voice in institutional decisions that affect them:
UC engages with the community surrounding the university through the surrounding community neighborhood associations and community development councils. UC sits on the board of CHCURC, BGCURC, CCDC, UHCURC, FOC and MOC along with community members, business owners, Greek affairs, and neighboring institutions (Children's Hospital, UC Health, Tr-Health, and the Cincinnati Zoo. A UC representative attends neighborhood association meetings for the 4 surrounding neighborhoods which allows them to present to the community the University's plans and also allows them to ask questions and provide feedback. This representative also encounters community members asking for the University's assistance with different events/issues, in which they respond accordingly.
UC engages the Private sector and seeks their input on institutional planning and operations through the College Advisory Board, which is a volunteer body that provides counsel to the Dean and senior college administrators, these people work to build private support for the college’s students and programs. https://www.alumni.uc.edu/ArtSci/Boards
UC engages with local NGO's and nonprofit organizations through the Community Advisory Council. The Community Advisory Council (CAC) was initially created in October 2015 by the University of Cincinnati’s Office for Safety and Reform to provide community input and guidance regarding reform efforts of the University of Cincinnati Police Division (UCPD). Chaired by prominent community leader, the Honorable Judge John A. West, representatives of this group also included: UC students, faculty, staff and alumni; neighborhood community groups; civic, faith and business leaders; and law enforcement officials. Following the completion of numerous police reforms, in January 2019 the CAC was renamed the Community Compliance Council (CCC). The diverse membership of the CCC will continue to promote diversity of thought and information exchange. The role of the CCC, however, has transitioned from advisory to compliance. https://www.uc.edu/about/publicsafety/reform/cac.html
UC engages the Private sector and seeks their input on institutional planning and operations through the College Advisory Board, which is a volunteer body that provides counsel to the Dean and senior college administrators, these people work to build private support for the college’s students and programs. https://www.alumni.uc.edu/ArtSci/Boards
UC engages with local NGO's and nonprofit organizations through the Community Advisory Council. The Community Advisory Council (CAC) was initially created in October 2015 by the University of Cincinnati’s Office for Safety and Reform to provide community input and guidance regarding reform efforts of the University of Cincinnati Police Division (UCPD). Chaired by prominent community leader, the Honorable Judge John A. West, representatives of this group also included: UC students, faculty, staff and alumni; neighborhood community groups; civic, faith and business leaders; and law enforcement officials. Following the completion of numerous police reforms, in January 2019 the CAC was renamed the Community Compliance Council (CCC). The diverse membership of the CCC will continue to promote diversity of thought and information exchange. The role of the CCC, however, has transitioned from advisory to compliance. https://www.uc.edu/about/publicsafety/reform/cac.html
Optional Fields
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Website URL where information about the institution’s governance structure is available:
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Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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