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Soul Searching in the Library: Welcome to the Occupation
dublin |
miscellaneous |
feature
Thursday December 04, 2003 19:04 by Paul Dillon / Antrophe / IMC supresident at ucd dot ie
UCD Students Protest Cutbacks in Library Budget
300 students are tonight occupying the main library in UCD. This is against the cutbacks which have been implemented in the library budget. Opening hours have been slashed, staffing levels have been cut and the materials avialble to students are in decline. UCD students Union are demanding that the college allocates the correct resources to the library and that the government reverses its programme of cuts.
The Students have vowed to continue the protest until their demands are reached. Tonights occupation is the 3rd time in three weeks that UCD students have occupied the main library. We reckon that around 600 students have taken part so far, if you include the numbers who attended the sit in in the Earlsfort Terrace library. Students in other colleges and ITs should consider similar actions to step up the campain against cutbacks. Pictures to follow!
FROM THE NEWSWIRE:
"The strains of one of the songs from The Prodigy's 'Music for the Jilted Generation' resonates up through the stairs and echoes past the computer banks, WOOs can be heard accompanying the beats. It's now 6am, and maybe the music started too late as when we somehow sussed out a stereo and some CDs most people had already begun to fade.
While essentially tonight is a protest occupation, making it evident to the authorities how seriously we regard this situation and our willingness to engage in confrontations over it, the whole process has been one whereby extra hours in which to study have been reclaimed by students by means of a simple refusal to leave when the college decides it's time to go."
UPDATE: FIRST VICTORY FOR UCD CAMPAIGN AGAINST CUTS
Direct action gets the goods...but is not conducive to sleep...
The strains of one of the songs off the Prodigy's 'Music for the Jilted
Generation' resonates up through the stairs and echoes past the
computer banks, woos can be heard accompanying the beats. It's now 6am,
and maybe the music started too late, as we somehow sussed out a stereo
and some cds most people had begun to fade. the conflicting impulses of
sips from shared cans a few more intrepid heads had brought in and the
quite sobriety of black coffee combining to leave us jittery wrecks,
dazed and confused. Two dance with an enthusiasm that refuses to
recognise the desire for sleep or the nights end. To join those crashed
and littering the aisles of the library, to find smaller groups
nestling in discussion or to sleep....
The nights reached that stage where all that is left is what has to be
cleaned up in the morning before we shuffle off dazed towards lectures
and in most cases bed.
Usually confined to surfing around the online library catalogue,
someone with more computer related knowledge than me stumbled upon a
function key which by passes the need for address bars, and allows the
more googgled eyes of us to escape onto the superhighway and spend the
last few hours scavenging across the internet for entertainment and
distraction.
Apparently, this is the first overnight occupation of a UCD building
since 1984, when students occupied part of the library building because
of administrations refusal to finish construction on areas of the
building. Whether or not this is true could probably be verified by
someone on the newswire. That is the nature of the student movement,
the constant cycle and turn over of students mitigates against a
collective memory which remembers these things. The hyper activism
which characterises student activism means there is little emphasis on
sitting back and contextualising or analysing the events the movement
sees unfurling.
Tonight saw over 300 people engage in a two hour reclamation of library
time that was cut back upon by the college authorities as a a response
to cutbacks initiated by the government as part of its ideological
attack on the value of public services. Its hard to gauge the exact
figures of those who chose to stay overnight and occupy the building
until it opened the following morning. Essentially after the study in
people naturally broke away into smaller groups of friends to wile away
the time. Meanwhile, a desperate few prolonged later into the night to
finish essays and cram for the duration for exams in the morning and
later in the week. But there doesn't seem to be a significant decrease
in the level of space taken over by people, perhaps as many 75% of
people stayed.
Previous to this years round of cutbacks; the library was open on
friday evenings, all day saturday and on sundry. The cutbacks see these
periods taken away. Originally the library sit in was conceived at
discussions on cutbacks in the college and the strategies need to fight
them at an open plenary discussion on education at the SU Class Rep
Training Event earlier in the year.
Before the first sit in, some of us waiting anxiously to begin outside
in the library tunnel joked that this was UCD's March 1st, that is an
openly planned and collective direct action. The class rep who proposed
the idea walked past, jokingly branded an anarchist while we waited for
her proposal to take shape she responded with confusion to remind us
she voted Fianna Fail.
Perhaps, that is reflective of the nature of direct action that it is a
form of political struggle which cuts across doctrine as when it
applied to those often most basic issues directly affecting people,
they see it as a logical strategy because fundamentally it is one that
can win.
The student movement is characterised by protest occupations, whose
goal rather than occupying space and using it as a political bargaining
tool or as part of an attempt to spread and build a wider movement is
to only occupy a few inches in the mornings tabloids, preferably with a
photo loaded with radical posturing; just for the cameras of course.
This is different. While essentially tonight is a protest occupation;
making it evident to the authorities how serious we see this situation
a nd our willingness to engage in confrontations over it. The whole
process has been one whereby extra hours in which to study have been
reclaimed by students in a simple refusal to leave when the college
decides its time to go.
Rather than being made up of the usual, recognisable enthuasists and
idealists; these actions have been composed of a broader swathe of the
UCD student body. These are the Science/engineering/vet/med type
students who need extra library hours, those students who never before
have taken a role in active dissent because usually the hours allocated
for meetings and events by a movement dominated by arts students are
hours in which they lock themselves in labs and compulsory lectures
they have no chance of bunking for half the year.
The library staff have supported the occupation all the way, sitting
back and watching it happen, leaving us to our own devices, letting us
outside to the smoking area below the library and sneaking our friends
in through the back door after Radiohead at the point. There is
sometimes a tendency to simply seeing two aspects to the college
community; academics and students. there is a third forgotten strata;
cleaners, librarians, technicians and so on those that keep the college
ticking over functionally; those for whom the college represents a
workplace rather than a place of research or study. It is probably not
surprising to see that it is from this strata that most support for the
sit ins emerges. While some have vocally supported the sit ins in their
lectures after lecture addresses from union activists; the academics
are strongly fucking noticeable by their absence in these events. Good
to see the academic Marxists, radical social theorists and all those
others leave it at the lecture and office door. If academia ever
represented a containment and isolation of dissent within texts then
here you go.
Today saw a 3/4 full bus leave UCD for a USI National Demo in town. In
one way this can be interpreted as a negative sign. I'd propose a
different reading of events. Tonight saw a a mass of people engage in
an effective form of action which has galvanised support across the
college and left the college authorities scratching their heads in
embarrassment. Some will say that there is a higher turn out because
people are here for the experience, the buzz and to piss about in the
library with their mates. So what if many are? They have still cut
across the colleges authority in refusing to obey its dictates on
opening and closing hours; and are willing to face disciplinary
measures as a result of this. That this confidence has arisen because
of the collective nature of the occupation, the collective confidence
of those taking part should be of no surprise.
Maybe it doesn't suggest a disappointing downturn in student
consciousness that so few turned out for USI today. Maybe students are
just discerning about what forms of protest are most effective when two
clear options are presented to them. The two options presented to UCD
students today were simple. To march around town in what unfortunately
has become an annual sham, where USI Leaders cheer lead from a platform
and feign radical rhetoric as we whoop from behind the police pen,
before they ask us all to piss off home our job is done now that the
Star have a wonderful back ground for the mornings photographs. Where
student leaders handcuff themselves to the railings of the Dáil and
helpfully uncuff themselves after a few moments of choice poses for
photographs.
That students are treated like consumers in vain attempts to sell them
a product packaged to resemble something like dissent, with no role in
its organisation, merely to consume it at the behest of some bloke
noone recognises (apparently he's USI, well thats what the t-shirt
says, innit? Fuck it i didnt vote for him...) is one aspect that
probably has undermined participation in these events.
The other option was to partake in a protest where everybody played a
part, in which everyone had the option of playing a role in its
organisation and rather than being the witnesses to its futility, could
see its fruits unfurl as they engaged in it. That is direct action and
I for one are glad to see the choice they made. Meetings that have
taken place with the president and incoming president has seen them
vocally agree with us. Now the issue is to force their hands into
finding the funding needed and rather than tailing the governments
ideological agenda (as they did with fees) openly oppose it and side
with the fight for an open public and free education system for all. As
a temporary measure we should continue and normalise these sit-ins till
midnight as a means of directly creating more studying hours while
escalating protests elsewhere.
Hopefully we can see more of this shit around Irish campuses. Its called direct action, and it works.
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