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The
UC Regents
Selected corporate connections are listed after name.
President
Robert Dynes: Leap Wireless
Richard
C. Blum: Blum Capital
Norman
Pattiz: Westwood One
Ward
Connerly (former regent)
Eddie Island
Gerald
Parsky: Aurora Capital Partners
John
J. Moores: JMI Inc.
Haim
Saban (former regent)
Sherry
Lansing
John Davies (former Regent)
Odessa Johnson
Joanne Kozberg: California Strategies
Monica Lozano:
Judith Hopkinson
David S. Lee:
George M. Marcus
Peter Preuss:
Frederick Ruiz: Ruiz Foods Inc.
Paul Wachter: Mainstreet Investments
Velma Montoya (former regent)
Matt Murray (former Regent)
Tom Sayles
Ex-Officio Regents
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Cruz Bustamante
Fabian Nunez
Jack O'Connell
Richard E. Rominger
Eric G. Juline
Faculty Representatives to The Regents
George Blumenthal
Clifford Brunck
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Who are the UC Regents?
The Regents of the University of California are the governing body
that oversees the operation of the UC system, its three national laboratories,
and its budget and finances, while determining the entire policy and
rules affecting the nation's largest University. 18 of the Regents
are appointed by the Governor of California for 12 year terms.
Most Regents
are drawn from California's economic elite. Current prominent Regents
include Richard Blum, Sherry Lansing, and John J. Moores. The other
seven UC Regents are "ex officio" members. These are: "the Governor,
Lieutenant Governor, Speaker of the Assembly, Superintendent of Public
Instruction, president and vice president of the Alumni Associations
of UC and the UC president." One Regent is drawn from the student
body. For basic information on the Regents a skimming of the UC Office
of the President website is helpful.
The Regents are, however, a much more complicated and politically motivated
body than they seem. The Regents are best understood as a body of corporate
elites, and bureaucratic, technical, or managerial leaders whose influence
and power is put to use by shaping policy within the economic mill that
is the University of California. Many of the Regents have financial stakes
in the operation of the UC through either direct investments, or through
indirect interest in the operation of the school and the general economic
benefits it brings to their enterprises. Many of the Regents serve on
the boards of some of California, and the nation's largest corporations.
Many of the firms controlled by UC Regents are powerful multinational
corporations worth billions of dollars.
The Regents are basically the board of the corporation UC. Like any
other corporation, the UC is interested in expanding its institutional
power and prestige. The UC is also a locus of important activities including
research, and technology transition, recruitment, basic education, and
vital partnerships with businesses, all of which function to stimulate
the economy and serve the interest of large firms, the economic elite,
and the military-industrial enterprise.
Much of the important work of the UC Regents is carried out through the
committee structure.
The Regents manage the university by dividing work
into many necessary committees, and then cross serve on these committees
where they have certain expertise and experience. The UC committees
include: Audit, Educational Policy, Finance, Grounds and Buildings, Health
Services, Investments, and the DoE Lab Oversight Committee. The last
two committees are of special importance. (Read on...)
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