Setting the record straight about the institution of academic tenure,
this book elucidates its history, legal status, and common
misunderstandings. Meiners argues that the original aim of tenure -- to
ensure academic freedom and integrity -- can still be achieved and that
the belief by many professors that tenure is a guarantee of lifelong
entitlement, whereby only the commission of a crime can lead to
dismissal, is wrong. He contends that as long as college administrators
follow the rules of their own institution, there is little to prevent
universities from dismissing tenured faculty who have become
incompetent.