The National University of Singapore (NUS) has apologised after sending library books from the now shuttered Yale-NUS College for disposal.
Students have criticised the university for not offering the books to the public, saying the incident āreflects a troubling pattern of opaque decision-making and lack of accountability within NUSā.
The college closed its doors for good this month after NUSĀ announced in 2021Ā that it was withdrawing from the partnership with Yale University.Ģż
On 20 May, one day before the final move-out date for the collegeās remaining residents, students said they saw a ālarge pile of library books in white garbage bagsā.Ģż
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According to a statement written by students, āNUS staff present initially told students theĀ books were being sent for donation before admitting that the books were being sent for shredding.ā
Approximately 9,000 of the 45,000 books from the Yale-NUS College library were duplicates of existing books in the universityās main library, the university has since said. Before the backlash, these extras were destined for a recycling centre, in line with the universityās standard operating procedures.Ģż
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Students at the university haveĀ Ā seeking clarity on why the books were being disposed of without first being offered to the wider community.Ģż
āWe express deep concern over the disposal of a significant number of academic materials that were in good condition,ā they write.ĢżĀ
āTheir destruction raises serious questions on the responsible use of money and resources, NUSās commitment to sustainability, and the value placed on academic texts that have supported past students and may continue to benefit present students of NUS.ā
In a statement toĀ , an NUS representative apologised for the incident.ĢżUniversity librarian Natalie Pang said the books had been offered to faculty.
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āWe understand later that many students are interested in having these books, and we would have usually acceded to their requests,ā she continued.ĢżāWe did not do so on this occasion and we apologise for the operational lapse.ā
The university has now said about 8,500 excess books will be given to book fairs.Ģż
In their petition, students claim the incident raises wider issues about transparency and ātop downā management at NUS, following a backlash in 2021 when the university merged several departments to form the College of Humanities and Sciences.Ģż
āFour years on, this incident is a stark reminder that unilateral decision-making persists despite NUSā aspirations to be a āvital communityā that āwork[s] togetherā,ā they write.Ģż
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Yale-NUS College was the subject of ongoing controversy throughout its existence, becomingĀ central to debates about academic freedomĀ in Singapore.Ģż
The Singaporean government hasĀ previously deniedĀ that its closure was related to these concerns.Ģż
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