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  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9948641567902882
    Format: 1 online resource (X, 289 p. 13 illus.)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2020.
    ISBN: 981-15-7598-3
    Series Statement: Evaluating Education: Normative Systems and Institutional Practices,
    Content: This open access book focuses on the dimensions of the discourse of 'The World Class University', its alleged characteristics, and its policy expressions. It offers a broad overview of the historical background and current trajectory of the world-class-university construct. It also deepens the theoretical discussion, and points a way forward out of present impasses resulting from the pervasive use and abuse of the notion of "world-class" and related terms in the discourse of quality assessment. The book includes approaches and results from fields of inquiry not otherwise prominent in Higher Education studies, including philosophy and media studies, as well as sociology, anthropology, educational theory. The growing impact of global rankings and their strategic use in the restructuring of higher education systems to increase global competitiveness has led to a ‘reputation race’ and the emergence of the global discourse of world class universities. The discourse of world class universities has rapid uptake in East Asian countries, with China recently refining its strategy. This book provides insights into this process and its future development.
    Note: 1 Welcome to the World Class University: Introduction -- Part I What's in a Word? -- 2 Disorderly Identities: University rankings and the re-ordering of the academic mind -- 3 Becoming World Class: What it means and what it does -- 4 Three Notions of the Global -- Part II World-Class Around the World -- 5 The Kafkaesque Pursuit of 'World Class': Audit culture and the reputational arms race in academia -- 6 Complicit Reproductions in the Global South: Courting world class universities and global rankings -- 7 Realizing the World Class University: Litigation and the state -- 8 World Class at All Costs -- 9 The Paradox of the Global University -- Part III Playing the World-Class Numbers Game -- 10 World Class Universities, Rankings and the Global Space of International Students -- 11 What Counts as World Class? Global University Rankings and Shifts in Institutional Strategies -- 12 The State Role in Excellent University Policies in the Era of Globalization: The case of China -- Part IV The Future of World-Class Universities -- 13 The Marketingisation of Higher Education -- 14 Contesting the Neoliberal Discourse of the World Class University: 'Digital Socialism', Openness and Academic Publishing -- 15 Spaces of Life: Transgressions in Conceptualising the World Class University -- 16 Realising the World-Class University: An Ecological Approach. , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 981-15-7597-5
    Language: English
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  • 2
    UID:
    almahu_9948664641802882
    Format: 1 online resource (311 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453909898
    Series Statement: Global Studies in Education 25
    Content: We live in the age of global science – but not, primarily, in the sense of ‘universal knowledge’ that has characterized the liberal metanarrative of ‘free’ science and the ‘free society’ since its early development in the Enlightenment. Today, an economic logic links science to national economic policy, while globalized multinational science dominates an environment where quality assurance replaces truth as the new regulative ideal. This book examines the nature of educational and science-based capitalism in its cybernetic, knowledge, algorithmic and bioinformational forms before turning to the emergence of the global science system and the promise of openness in the growth of international research collaboration, the development of the global knowledge commons and the rise of the open science economy. Education, Science and Knowledge Capitalism explores the nature of cognitive capitalism, the emerging mode of social production for public education and science and its promise for the democratization of knowledge.
    Content: «In ‘Education, Science and Knowledge Capitalism: Creativity and the Promise of Openness’, Michael A. Peters provides us with unequalled insight into the trends of our time, and persuades us of our potential to design the future. His materials, it seems, are the whole of nineteenth- and twentieth-century thought, reworked in novel and constructive ways, and with his characteristic directness and clarity. This is one of the very best of Peters’ fecund works. Highly recommended.» (Simon Marginson, Professor of Higher Education, University of Melbourne) «Science is the powerhouse of modern capitalism. Education is the crucible of science. Michael A. Peters’ book unpicks the complex, potent relationships between economy, education and science. He does this in a crisp, stylish and lucid manner. He leaves us with a compelling sense of how scientific ingenuity propels capitalism’s most audacious innovations. Capitalism’s dialectic of free inquiry and intellectual property turns knowledge into capital, and capital into a kind of congealed cognition. Peters’ account of this is of great interest.» (Peter Murphy, Professor of Creative Arts and Social Aesthetics, James Cook University) «In this thoughtful and engaging volume, Michael A. Peters demonstrates precisely those qualities he seeks to analyse in the book: creativity and openness. In so doing, he helps us to better understand the politics of knowledge under contemporary capitalism and to reconsider the nature and significance of education in the twenty-first century.» (Peter Roberts, University of Canterbury, New Zealand)
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433120572
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433120589
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_476043271
    Format: VI, 224 S , Ill , 22 cm
    Edition: 1. ed.
    ISBN: 0312296118 , 0312296096
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Language: English
    Subjects: Philosophy
    RVK:
    Keywords: Derrida, Jacques 1930-2004 ; Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Cover
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
    UID:
    almahu_9948664655202882
    Format: 1 online resource (412 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453900079
    Content: Advancement in the arts and sciences is a primary driver of economic production and social policy in post-industrial societies. Imagination steps back and asks ‘what advances the arts and sciences?’ This book explores the collective, social and global dimension of human imagining–and the ambivalent relationship of social institutions, including universities, schools, economies, media and culture industries, to the collective imagination. Basic discovery requires high levels of creative thinking: Imagination looks at the social conditions that make path-breaking thought possible on a large scale. It examines the role of aesthetic, pictorial, digital, paradoxical and other imaginative styles of thinking, and the times and places in which such styles become socially prominent and a significant force in economic and cultural production. It looks at successful societies as they are approaching their peak, when new ideas are driving them forward.
    Content: «Imagine three intellectuals with a plank. Imagine them standing on the plank, looking under it, to see what is holding it up. Imagine them designing and building a new plank. It resembles a Hawaiian invention, and it might be a surfboard. Scramble on back, and hold tight, for this will be some ride. In an academic culture which is often hollow and repetitious, this book offers something that is really new. It does not merely argue, but shows imagination by example. It innovates both in content and form. This is a major achievement.» (Professor Peter Beilharz, Professor of Sociology, La Trobe University) «This collection provides original and often counter-intuitive insights into central issues facing public institutions, particularly universities, in a globalizing and increasingly knowledge-based economy. It is almost head-spinning in its challenges to prevailing orthodoxies from across the intellectual spectrum, and the capacity to crash-merge ideas that have traditionally inhabited distinct realms to generate original knowledge syntheses.» (Terry Flew, Professor of Media and Communication, Creative Industries Faculty, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia) «By turns informative, infuriating and inspirational, Murphy, Peters and Marginson’s Imagination is clearly the most critical of the three volumes in the series. Perhaps as a result, it is very good to think with.» (Andrew Miler, Professor of Cultural Studies, Monash University) «This collective volume might have been titled the primacy of the imagination–it elaborates, articulates and almost perfects a theory of the creative act as imaginative re-creation. The contributors raise a wide variety of issues focused around imagination as social practice within the confines of contemporary societies as knowledge economies. For the three authors, the act of creative imagining is a self-perpetuating paradox which institutes new meanings and novel codes of signification. The act of imagination re-structures the human mind in order to face its creative performance and objectifying output. The writers quite firmly assert that imagination does not simply free the mind from the restrictions of the known and its social conditions, but it expands the limits of the known itself and institutes human presence as an act of continuing self-definition. From the ancient Greeks and Plato to the Romantics and the postmodern capitalist economies, this book explores the deep interaction between the need for novel ways of seeing and new practices of creative action. This is a meticulous, passionate and original exploration that simply redefines the parameters of the question.» (Vrasidas Karalis, Associate Professor of Modern Greek, University of Sydney) «Who would want to demur from the sentiment that imagination is a marvellous thing? Do we not live in the age of creative industries, knowledge economies, cyber-space and post-industrialism? Romancing our zeitgeists, and believing in new signs and wonders is a perennial pastime of human societies. Much harder work is to think about imagination, collective forms of creativity and knowledge production. This is the signal achievement of Imagination. Its three authors do the hard work for us and in three different registers: first in foundational terms, that of thinking about imagination and creativity as collective knowledge innovation and production; second, by interpreting the history of imagination as the cumulative production of knowledge across cultures and ultimately as a global process; and third, in the age of cyber capitalism, understanding the transmission of knowledge via digital production and open sourcing of property. This kind of thinking is hard work but good writing that produces lucid critical insight. Murphy, Peters and Marginson demonstrate that critical analysis and
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433105289
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433105296
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    almahu_9948664889602882
    Format: 1 online resource (137 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453911945
    Series Statement: Education and Struggle 1
    Content: This book sheds light on the work of one of the 20th century’s foremost critical educators, the Italian Lorenzo Milani (1923–1967), on the 90th anniversary of his birth. It provides an exposition and critical analysis of the ideas contained in his writings, ideas that emerged from his experiences in two Tuscan localities. The work of Milani and the School of Barbiana that he directed provide signposts for a critically and sociologically engaged pedagogy. Important themes include education and class politics; education and imperialism; education and the culture of militarization; the collective dimensions of learning and writing; peer tutoring; critical media literacy; and reading history against the grain. These ideas are analyzed with reference to similar and contrasting ideas by other international educators, scholars and thinkers. As the book argues, Milani’s oeuvre contains important ingredients for a social justice-oriented critical pedagogy. The spirit for this pedagogical approach is captured in the School of Barbiana’s motto ‘I care.’
    Content: «As this volume shows, there was quite sufficient material in the Letters to make them extremely significant resources for the development of a critical pedagogy which enabled a move beyond the curriculum as the crucial area of educational contestation.» (From the Preface by Roger Dale, Universities of Bristol and Auckland) «This cleverly written and sensible book reveals the soul of Lorenzo Milani as manifest throughout his life and action. During the past 46 years, we have seldom had occasion to read such a good and exhaustive summary of the concepts and facts that lie at the heart of Lorenzo Milani’s life and human experience. Hic est aut nusquam quod quaerimus.» (The ‘evergreen’ pupils of Don L. Milani, Don Milani & Barbiana School, Training & Research Center, Vicchio-Florence) «This rare contribution to the literature bears witness to the reasons educators around the globe must work to formidably rethink critical traditions derived primarily from North American theories of schooling. Through skillfully engaging the revolutionary force of Italian educator Lorenzo Milani’s pedagogy and the passion of Lettera a una Professoressa, Federico Batini, Peter Mayo, and Alessio Surian move us brilliantly toward an international vision of critical pedagogy – a humanizing vision firmly anchored upon the everyday lives of those who most suffer the ravages of capitalism’s discontent.» (Antonia Darder, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles; author of Culture and Power in the Classroom and Reinventing Paulo Freire: A Pedagogy of Love) «The pedagogical work of Lorenzo Milani is original, inspirational, and relevant for today’s realities. A radical democratic educator, he used collective writing as critical literacy production with his young students. His ideas and practices certainly deserve more international attention, and this book provides an engaging and thoughtful introduction to them. Batini, Mayo, and Surian make an important and timely contribution to the field of critical pedagogy. This is a must-read for all those interested in the connections between education and social justice.» (Daniel Schugurensky, School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University)
    Note: Contents: Introduction: Lorenzo Milani’s Relevance to our Times – Don Milani and his Time – Lorenzo Milani and the School of Barbiana’s Pedagogical Approach – Writing as Collective Literacy.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433121524
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433121531
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    almahu_9948664653902882
    Format: 1 online resource (254 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453900529
    Series Statement: New Literacies and Digital Epistemologies 40
    Content: Who Do They Think They Are? Teenage Girls and Their Avatars in Spaces of Social Online Communication documents a descriptive case study of teenage girls who created autobiographical avatars for their social online spaces. It explores the complex and often conflicted negotiations behind girlhood identity and representation in a cyber-social world. Comparisons are drawn between autobiographical avatars and the profile pictures that teenage girls use on their social networking sites as they consider the manner in which identity is negotiated, constructed, co-authored, and represented. The contradictions and expectations of online social and popular culture make representations of identity simultaneously limitless and limiting for the girls who create them. Given the nature of the identity-defining and social act of creating an autobiographical avatar, a critical media literacy frame provides a pedagogical opportunity for bringing avatar construction into the secondary English language arts classroom. This book provides guidance for educators and researchers interested in the social construction of identity in an increasingly visual world, and will be valuable in courses ranging from literacy studies, media education, cultural studies, youth studies, educational research, teacher education, and popular culture to feminist, gender studies, and women’s studies courses.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433105524
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
    UID:
    almahu_9948665000202882
    Format: 1 online resource (489 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453915677
    Series Statement: Education and Struggle 6
    Content: «Pedagogy of Insurrection» by Peter McLaren has won the American Educational Research Association, Division B Outstanding Book Recognition Award 2016. Peter McLaren, named Outstanding Educator in America by the Association of Educators of Latin America and the Caribbean in 2013 and winner of numerous awards for his scholarship and international political activism, has penned another classic work with Pedagogy of Insurrection. One of the educators that Ana Maria (Nita) Araújo Freire credits as an architect of what has come to be known worldwide as critical pedagogy, and who Paulo Freire named his ‘intellectual cousin,’ McLaren has consistently produced iconoclastic work that has been heralded by educators worldwide as among some of the most significant commentary on the state of education. He is Honorary President of the Instituto McLaren de Pedagogía Crítica y Educación Popular in Ensenada, México, and Honorary Director of the Center for Critical Pedagogy Research at Northeast Normal University in China.
    Content: «[...] readers should start their potential acquaintance with Peter McLaren by enjoying the poetics of his text, which contributes essentially to the ‘‘sound’’ of his radically critical arguments and his plea for ‘‘concrete utopian praxis’’.» (Darko Strajn, International Revue of Education Volume 63, Issue 3/2017)
    Note: Contents: Comrade Jesus – Comrade Freire – Comrade Chávez (with Mike Cole) – Comrade Fidel, the French Canadian and a Literacy Campaign – Comrade Che – Revolutionary Critical Pedagogy: A Conversation with Peter McLaren (with Sebastjan Leban) – Revolutionary Critical Pedagogy is Made by Walking in a World Where Many Worlds Coexist (with Petar Jandrić) – Seeds of Resistance: Towards a Revolutionary Critical Ecopedagogy – Radical Negativity: Music Education for Social Justice – Deploying Guns to Expendable Communities: Bloodshed in Mexico, U.S. Imperialism and Transnational Capital – A Call for Revolutionary Critical Pedagogy (with Lilia D. Monzó and Arturo Rodriguez) – Education as Class Warfare – Critical Rage Pedagogy: From Critical Catharsis to Self and Social Transformation.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433128967
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433128974
    Language: English
    Subjects: Education
    RVK:
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York : Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
    UID:
    almahu_9948664860102882
    Format: 1 online resource (271 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781453918357
    Series Statement: Education and Struggle 7
    Content: Critical pedagogy, political economics, and aesthetic theory combine with dialectical and materialist understandings of science, society, and revolutionary politics to develop the most radical goals of society and education. In Philosophy and Critical Pedagogy: Insurrection and Commonwealth, Marcuse’s hitherto misunderstood and neglected philosophy of labor is reconsidered, resulting in a labor theory of ethics. This develops commonwealth criteria of judgment regarding the real and enduring economic and political possibilities that concretely encompass all of our engagement and action. Marcuse’s newly discovered 1974 Paris Lectures are examined and the theories of Georg Lukács and Ernest Manheim contextualize the analysis to permit a critical assessment of the nature of dialectical methodology today. Revolutionary strategy and a common-ground political program against intensifying inequalities of class, race, and gender comprise the book’s commonwealth counter-offensive.
    Content: «We live in a time of great unrest. The effects of racism, economic exploitation, and other forms of social oppression are beginning to be contested in many pockets of our society. In these times, Charles Reitz’s new book is a must-read for those who are seeking a new theoretical framework for addressing recent structures and mechanisms of alienation and exploitation. This book provides us with a history of dialectics as well as insights into how dialectical thinking can help us grasp and transform our society. The conversation created between Marx, Marcuse, and Manheim is very informative. One of the greatest contributions by Reitz is his rethinking of the idea of commonwealth. Those of us who are interested in further developing our democratic experiment will gain much from this book.» (Arnold L. Farr, Professor of Philosophy, University of Kentucky) «Reitz’s groundbreaking essays, engaging the work of Marx, Marcuse, and Manheim, demonstrate how we might reformulate our relationship with labor, a central component of a liberated society. Reitz provides hope that we can develop, through critical education, an emancipatory consciousness and the radical praxis from which a liberated society may emerge.» (Sarah Surak, Assistant Professor, Departments of Political Science and Environmental Studies, Salisbury University, Maryland) «This volume persuasively restores philosophy to its rightful and necessary place in education. From investigations of historical experience, through critiques of conservative figures, Reitz arrives at new ways critical theory can revive our entire culture. And this is achieved with such clarity and resolve that the reader comes away understanding socialist humanism could save us after all.» (Fred Whitehead, co-editor, Freethought on the American Frontier)
    Content: «We live in a time of great unrest. The effects of racism, economic exploitation, and other forms of social oppression are beginning to be contested in many pockets of our society. In these times, Charles Reitz’s new book is a must-read for those who are seeking a new theoretical framework for addressing recent structures and mechanisms of alienation and exploitation. This book provides us with a history of dialectics as well as insights into how dialectical thinking can help us grasp and transform our society. The conversation created between Marx, Marcuse, and Manheim is very informative. One of the greatest contributions by Reitz is his rethinking of the idea of commonwealth. Those of us who are interested in further developing our democratic experiment will gain much from this book.» (Arnold L. Farr, Professor of Philosophy, University of Kentucky) «Reitz’s groundbreaking essays, engaging the work of Marx, Marcuse, and Manheim, demonstrate how we might reformulate our relationship with labor, a central component of a liberated society. Reitz provides hope that we can develop, through critical education, an emancipatory consciousness and the radical praxis from which a liberated society may emerge. » (Sarah Surak, Assistant Professor, Departments of Political Science and Environmental Studies, Salisbury University, Maryland) «This volume persuasively restores philosophy to its rightful and necessary place in education. From investigations of historical experience, through critiques of conservative figures, Reitz arrives at new ways critical theory can revive our entire culture. And this is achieved with such clarity and resolve that the reader comes away understanding socialist humanism could save us after all.» (Fred Whitehead, co-editor, Freethought on the American Frontier)
    Note: Contents: Education and Struggle – Materialism and Dialectics: Nature, History, and Knowing – The Dialectic of the Concrete Concept: Ernest Manheim – Liberating «the Critical» in Critical Theory – The «Linguistic Turn» and Anti-Foundationalism – Herbert Marcuse and the New Culture Wars: Campus Codes, Hate Speech, and the Critique of Pure Tolerance – Education Against Alienation – The Labor Theory of Ethics and Commonwealth – Global Capitalism and Radical Opposition: Herbert Marcuse’s Paris Lectures at Vincennes University, 1974 – Critical Education and Political Economy: Labor, Leadership and Learning – Decommodification and Liberation: Commonwealth as Aesthetic Form of an Alienation-Free Society – The Commonwealth Counter-Offensive – Engaging a Radical Past: Socialist Germans in N.Y.C., 1853 – Engaging a Radical Past: Anti-Racism in Kansas Free State Struggle, 1854.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433133626
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433133633
    Language: English
    Subjects: Education
    RVK:
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_1778471633
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (289 p.)
    ISBN: 9789811575983
    Series Statement: Evaluating Education: Normative Systems and Institutional Practices
    Content: This open access book focuses on the dimensions of the discourse of 'The World Class University', its alleged characteristics, and its policy expressions. It offers a broad overview of the historical background and current trajectory of the world-class-university construct. It also deepens the theoretical discussion, and points a way forward out of present impasses resulting from the pervasive use and abuse of the notion of "world-class" and related terms in the discourse of quality assessment. The book includes approaches and results from fields of inquiry not otherwise prominent in Higher Education studies, including philosophy and media studies, as well as sociology, anthropology, educational theory. The growing impact of global rankings and their strategic use in the restructuring of higher education systems to increase global competitiveness has led to a ‘reputation race’ and the emergence of the global discourse of world class universities. The discourse of world class universities has rapid uptake in East Asian countries, with China recently refining its strategy. This book provides insights into this process and its future development
    Note: English
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 10
    UID:
    almahu_9948665208002882
    Format: 1 online resource (634 p.) , 16 ill.
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9781433149801
    Series Statement: Global Studies in Education 18
    Content: The Idea of the University: Contemporary Perspectives, Volume 2 is a companion to The Idea of the University: A Reader, Volume 1, which presents readings from the major texts on the idea of the university over the last two hundred years. This volume consists of essays from the leading contemporary scholars of the university across the world. The essays examine ideas of the university that lie tacitly in its national and global framing, and offer creative ideas in taking the university forward, both on a regional and on a world-wide basis. Specific lines of inquiry include those of citizenship, cosmopolitanism, wisdom, ecology and freedom. The thirty chapters in this volume have been invitingly grouped to offer intriguing ways into the material, which in turn opens the way to very large conceptual and theoretical issues. In an era of marketization, can universities attend to any global responsibilities? Might regionalism—in Europe, in South America, in Africa—prompt new ideas of the university? What understandings of knowledge are feasible in a digital age? Amid local, national, regional and worldly callings, how might citizenship be construed? In a final section, a space opens for more speculative inquiries as to the conceptual possibilities ahead: Just what ideas of the university might feasibly be entertained for the twenty-first century? Might it be envisaged that the university has both responsibilities and possibilities in playing a part in bringing about a better world? Those concluding chapters in The Idea of the University: Contemporary Perspectives respond in original ways and all in an optimistic fashion.
    Content: Michael A. Peters and Ronald Barnett have done the academic community a great service by collecting, in two handsome and well-structured volumes, a number of the most important contributions in thinking about the university, as well as providing illuminating and instructive directives for understanding the current relevance of the essays. These books should be required reading for anyone who cares about higher education in the present and the future. —Sharon Rider, Professor of Philosophy, Uppsala University
    Content: This two-volume work will provide a wonderful resource for all who have an interest in the idea of the university. Through their careful selection of both historical and contemporary texts, and their own insightful commentaries, Michael Peters and Ronald Barnett take readers on a fascinating, thought-provoking intellectual journey. From the canonical musings of Kant, Humboldt and Newman to recent scholarship on neoliberalism, globalization and digital developments in higher education, The Idea of the University offers much for teachers and students, managers and administrators, and politicians and policy-makers to reflect on as they play their parts in creating the university of the future. —Peter Roberts, Professor of Education, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
    Note: Acknowledgements – Ronald Barnett/Michael A. Peters: Introduction: Overcoming Pessimism, Forging Possibilities – Part One: Addressing Neoliberalism – Michael A. Peters: Introduction – Jana Bacevic: Chapter One: University under Attack? Politics, Contestation and Agency beyond the ‘Neoliberal University’ – Henry A. Giroux: Chapter Two: Defending Higher Education in the Age of Barbarism – Sheila Slaughter/Brendan Cantwell: Chapter Three: Academic Capitalism: Reflections on Higher Education in the United States and European Union – Wesley Shumar and Sarah Robinson: Chapter Four: Rethinking the Entrepreneurial University for the 21st Century – Part Two: The Global University – Ronald Barnett: Introduction – Jane Knight: Chapter Five: The International University: Models and Muddles – Simon Marginson: Chapter Six: The Anglo-American University: Support Structure for the 1 per cent – Francine Rochford: Chapter Seven: Freedom and Control in the Constrained Modern University – Nicolas Standaert: Chapter Eight: Displaced towards a Networked University – Part Three: European Ideas – Michael A. Peters: Introduction – Marek Kwiek: Chapter Nine: The University and the State in Europe: The Uncertain Future of the Traditional Social Contract – Susan L. Robertson/Joanna Tidy/Janja Komljenovic: Chapter Ten: Forum Shifting and Shape Making in Higher Education Services – Peter Scott: Chapter Eleven: The European University: Heartland to Periphery and Even Back Again? – Jussi Välimaa: Chapter Twelve: The Nordic Idea of University – Thorsten Nybom: Chapter Thirteen: European Universities: Another Somewhat Lamenting—Yet Basically Hopeful—Account – Part Four: Regional Perspectives – Ronald Barnett: Introduction – N’Dri Thérèse Assié-Lumumba: Chapter Fourteen: The Idea of the University in the Evolving Higher Education Landscape in Africa – Carolina Guzmán-Valenzuela/Andrés Bernasconi: Chapter Fifteen: The Latin-American University: Past, Present and Future – Yusef Waghid/Nuraan Davids: Chapter Sixteen: Towards an African University in Becoming: Positive Risk, Hope and Imagination – Part Five: Knowledge and Research – Ronald Barnett: Introduction – Gerard Delanty: Chapter Seventeen: Citizenship and the University: The Consequences of Globalization – Alberto Amaral: Chapter Eighteen: Universities and the Knowledge Society Revisited – Robert Hassan: Chapter Nineteen: Parting Ways: Analogue People in a Digital University – Part Six: Teaching and Students – Ronald Barnett: Introduction – Martha C. Nussbaum: Chapter Twenty: Citizens of the World – Paul Gibbs: Chapter Twenty-One: Trust in the University – Jan Masschelein/Maarten Simons: Chapter Twenty-Two: The University as Public Pedagogic Form – Jon Nixon: Chapter Twenty-Three: Universities as Civic Spaces: In the Footsteps of Arendt and Jaspers – Part Seven: Possibilities – Michael A. Peters: Introduction – Gary Rolfe: Chapter Twenty-Four: The Idea(l) of a Paraversity – Peter Murphy: Chapter Twenty-Five: The Platform University: The Destruction and Resurrection of Universities in the Auto-Industrial Age – Tom Bourner: Chapter Twenty-Six: The Fully-Functioning University – Rikke Toft Nørgard/Søren Smedegaard Ernst Bengsten: Chapter Twenty-Seven: Academic Citizenship beyond the Campus: A Call for the Placeful University – Nicholas Maxwell: Chapter Twenty-Eight: Do We Need an Academic Revolution to Create a Wiser World? – Michael A. Peters: Chapter Twenty-Nine: Renewing the Idea of the University: The Cosmopolitan and Postcolonial Projects – Ronald Barnett: Chapter Thirty: The Ecological University—A University Whose Time Has Come– Contributor Biographies – Subject Index – Name Index.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433149788
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781433149795
    Language: English
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