Academic Capitalism: Politics, Policies, and the Entrepreneurial University

Overview

The globalization of the political economy at the end of the twentieth century is destabilizing the traditional patterns of university professional work. One of the major changes that has taken place as a result of globalization is that faculty, who were previously situated between capital and labor, are now positioned squarely in the marketplace. To grasp the extent of changes taking place and to understand the forces of change, Academic Capitalism examines the current state of academic careers and institutions,...

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Overview

The globalization of the political economy at the end of the twentieth century is destabilizing the traditional patterns of university professional work. One of the major changes that has taken place as a result of globalization is that faculty, who were previously situated between capital and labor, are now positioned squarely in the marketplace. To grasp the extent of changes taking place and to understand the forces of change, Academic Capitalism examines the current state of academic careers and institutions, with a particular focus on public research universities in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Australia. In this wide-ranging analysis, Sheila Slaughter and Larry L. Leslie examine every aspect of academic work unexplored: undergraduate and graduate education, teaching and research, student aid policies, and federal research policies.

The Johns Hopkins University Press

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Editorial Reviews

College Literature

— Erin Hunt

College and Research Libraries - Michael Ryan

Without even mentioning the dreaded and dated Marx, the authors have produced a convincing analysis of the transition of the academy from its own protected form of feudalism to a predatory capitalism... [including] long-term changes in the ethos, aims, and management of universities—changes that have wedded them and their futures to the vagaries of the global marketplace

Education Review - Jann Contento

The authors conclude that a better understanding of academic capitalism will foster and empower successful academic capitalists. However, they view with regret the demise of the concept of the university as a community in which the individual members are oriented primarily toward the greater good of the organization... The book provides a valuable overview of the globalization of the political economy.

College and Research Libraries
Without even mentioning the dreaded and dated Marx, the authors have produced a convincing analysis of the transition of the academy from its own protected form of feudalism to a predatory capitalism... [including] long-term changes in the ethos, aims, and management of universities—changes that have wedded them and their futures to the vagaries of the global marketplace

— Michael Ryan

Education Review
The authors conclude that a better understanding of academic capitalism will foster and empower successful academic capitalists. However, they view with regret the demise of the concept of the university as a community in which the individual members are oriented primarily toward the greater good of the organization... The book provides a valuable overview of the globalization of the political economy.

— Jann Contento

Choice

In their fascinating study of public research universities, Slaughter and Leslie... affirm that tertiary education in the U.S. as well as in Australia, Canada, and Great Britain, especially since 1970, has merged with the marketplace, a development that alarms many as a kind of academic prostitution... This well-written book is must reading for anyone, lay or professional, seriously interested in the future of higher education.

College and Research Libraries

A convincing analysis of the transition of the academy from its own protected form of feudalism to a predatory capitalism.

— Michael Ryan

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780801862588
  • Publisher: Hopkins Fulfillment Service
  • Publication date: 10/28/1999
  • Series: American Land Classics Series
  • Edition description: New Edition
  • Edition number: 1
  • Pages: 300
  • Sales rank: 1,124,026
  • Product dimensions: 6.00 (w) x 9.00 (h) x 0.67 (d)

Meet the Author

Sheila Slaughter is a professor of higher education at the Center for the Study of Higher Education, University of Arizona. Her books include Higher Learning and High Technology. Larry L. Leslie is a professor of higher education and the academic dean, College of Education, University of Arizona. His books include The Economic Value of Higher Education.

The Johns Hopkins University Press

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Table of Contents

List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Ch. 1 Academic Capitalism 1
Ch. 2 Academic Science and Technology in the Global Marketplace 23
Ch. 3 Organizational Turbulence and Resource Dependence 64
Ch. 4 Advantages and Disadvantages of Academic Capitalism 113
Ch. 5 Technology Transfer Strategies as a Response to Resource Dependence 139
Ch. 6 Entrepreneurial Knowledge 178
Ch. 7 Reprise: Academic Capitalism 208
Appendix Changes in Financing Higher Education in OECD Countries and the Four Nations 247
References 257
Index 271
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