2014
DOI: 10.26530/oapen_515938
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Through a Glass Darkly: The Social Sciences Look at the Neoliberal University

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Cited by 37 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(87 reference statements)
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“…The rising cost of university has prompted researchers from countries such as the UK, Australia and Sweden to raise concerns about the massification and marketisation of higher education, which has propelled student consumerism deeper into the higher education discourse (Anne-Charlotte et al 2013;Pitman, Koshy, and Phillimore 2015;Thornton 2014;Tomlinson 2017;Wong and Chiu 2017). Recent higher education research has focused on what universities and staff can do to support students.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rising cost of university has prompted researchers from countries such as the UK, Australia and Sweden to raise concerns about the massification and marketisation of higher education, which has propelled student consumerism deeper into the higher education discourse (Anne-Charlotte et al 2013;Pitman, Koshy, and Phillimore 2015;Thornton 2014;Tomlinson 2017;Wong and Chiu 2017). Recent higher education research has focused on what universities and staff can do to support students.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, increasing competition has led universities to rely on metrics and 'league tables' of questionable validity and limited relevance to the quality of education, as they try to prove their 'excellence' across other measures (Mok & Neubauer, 2016). The effects on academics have been negative and material, often teaching increased class sizes with reduced resources including fewer administrative support staff and related increases in administrative responsibilities (Deem, 1998;Thornton, 2014b). Many academics are struggling, particularly in the UK, where some have an additional role as personal tutors providing pastoral care for students (Student Minds, 2014).…”
Section: A Background Of Neoliberalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…That interpretation, though, runs the risk of suggesting, or of being interpreted as suggesting, that liberal ideology is a primary driver of the nature of the contemporary cultural context. It could be argued that the neo-liberal tenets of the contemporary cultural context are, rather, essentially incidental to its cultural dominance, while acknowledging that the coincidence has provided a fruitful ground for much critique of neo-liberalism from concerned commentators (Davies 2014;Thornton 2014) and has served to embolden those reformers seeking to respond to the imperative for educational performativity in the contemporary cultural context (Bagnall 2004). In Western culture at least, the prevailing cultural context in recent times may be seen as the product of what Habermas (1983, p. 9) termed 'the project of modernity …to develop objective science, universal morality and law, and autonomous art.'…”
Section: Jarvis's Theorisation Of the Contemporary Cultural Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%