A Letter Addressed to the EspacesTemps.net Committee.
Matthew G. Hannah | 31.01.2011
Dear Editorial Board, I am glad to see you are considering this issue. It is crucial to the future of academic research. I include below a few basic thoughts about it. To set a context for these thoughts, I should mention that I am currently working on a larger research project with a colleague, Prof. [...]
Between Old Hierarchy and New Orthodoxy.
Pál Nyíri et Barak Kalir | 12.07.2010
There is a growing body of literature and events critiquing the spread of ‘audit cultures’ [...]
A View on University Life from Below.
Mario Rutten | 12.07.2010
It’s been a long time since academic discussions about research and teaching were part of the board meetings of the department of Anthropology and Sociology of the University of Amsterdam. Most of our meetings today deal with administrative problems only. Sometimes these departmental meetings are followed immediately by teaching obligations. Usually, I find it hard [...]
| 12.07.2010
Événements. « Curating the European Universities. European Exposition and Public Debate », 10 et 11 février 2011, Université Catholique de Louvain. Ce colloque est organisé par le Laboratory for Education and Society de l’Université catholique de Louvain, le Laboratory for Educationnal Theory de l’Univerité de Stirling (Écosse) et le Convenant entre l’Université catholique de Louvain [...]
Returnee Scholars’ Perception of Chinese Higher Education.
Lin Yi | 12.07.2010
The idea of audit, originated from financial regulation, has been introduced into public sectors to rank and assess professional performance against bureaucratic benchmarks and economic targets in response to organizational failure either due to inefficacy (low quality) or scandals (Power 2007: 3, Shore 2008, Shore and Wright 1999). The past two decades have witnessed an [...]
Chris Lorenz | 12.07.2010
To all appearances higher education in both the Eu and the Us has turned into a more fashionable topic for politicians and journalists than it was ten years ago. Since rumour has it that in the ‘age of globalisation’ we are living in a ‘knowledge society’ and that our economies are basically ‘knowledge economies,’ higher [...]
Chris Lorenz | 12.07.2010
Aux yeux des hommes politiques et des journalistes, l’enseignement supérieur, en Europe comme aux États-Unis, est, semble-t-il, un sujet beaucoup plus porteur qu’il ne l’était il y a dix ans. Puisque, selon les rumeurs, dans « notre ère globalisée », nous vivons dans une « société de la connaissance » et puisque nos économies sont fondamentalement des « économies de [...]
Dvora Yanow | 12.07.2010
‘The whole business of peer-reviewed journals has no effect on the external world and is just a Rube Goldberg machine designed to get people tenure.’ James C. Scott (2007: 385) ‘Accountability has turned to . . . bean-counting.’ Chester E. Finn, Jr., former Us Assistant Secretary of Education, on current schools policy (quoted in Dillon [...]
Yiu Fai Chow, Jeroen de Kloet et Helen Hok-Sze Leung | 12.07.2010
‘Now, of course, we live in Thatcher’s psyche if not her anus, in the world she made, of competition, consumerism, celebrity and guilt’s bastard son, charity: bingeing and debt.’ Hanif Kureishi (2008: 271) The hidden injuries of the neo-liberal University. In a recently published piece titled ‘Breaking the Silence: The Hidden Injuries of the Neoliberal [...]
Notes from Asia.
Xiang Biao | 12.07.2010
Institutionalized education in most part of the human society seems intrinsically hierarchical. One is supposed to progress from a ‘lower’ level of learning to the ‘higher’; ‘average’ kids study in mediocre schools, and the ‘outstanding’ go to top colleges; and, finally, ‘degree’ is by definition hierarchical. Recent discussions on higher education have focused on the [...]