For the French readers, Pierre Jourde wrote a funny, but sad, article about how administrators now control academia :
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2008/12/JOURDE/16610You have bureaucrats with Phd's in "management of innovative educational excellence," or some other goofy degree, who give orders to the most brilliant minds of the country. It leads to farcical situations where unread managers, who don't know anything about culture and possess no understanting of science at all, give motivational speeches to members of the Collège de France. A few decades ago, such morons would have been laughed at. Today, they're in charge.
And, of course, you can't say anything. If you'd react, you'd be considered as an elitist, if not as a dangerous reactionary who uses bourgeois culture as an instrument to humiliate the meek.
This to say that people at major institutions aren't safe. In France, scholars at the Collège or the ENS thought their prestige would protect them. They were wrong : they, too, are now petty employees under the authority of incompetent managers. In the UK, I hope that scholars at Oxbridge and the like don't feel safe, because they aren't.
Maybe we have been too nice. A friend of mine talks about "le respect de l'autre con." He means that respect for the other has led academics to accept just anything, even the most stupid, comical or self-destructive ideas. "Don't be negative" is our ultimate motto. Of course, nobody wants to be coined as a bitter misanthrope. Nonetheless, if we don't want to be ruled by fools, showing a little bit of intellectual pride might prove necessary.