University Keywords

How American universities operate as social and economic engines that shape society beyond their traditional educational roles.

University Keywords gathers, contextualizes, and develops original understandings of 27 key terms that define the study and operation of the American university today. Editor Andy Hines and the book's contributors invite readers to rethink the university beyond its public image as a space of learning and understand how it also operates as a real estate powerhouse, a hedge fund, a debt machine, and even a crisis-producing entity embedded in the broader American economy.

Through essays written by over thirty contributors from a variety of disciplines, this book examines the university's intersecting functions, from its financial entanglements to its often-contradictory roles in society. Contributors illustrate how universities simultaneously link and separate communities—faculty, students, nurses, janitors, and the surrounding public—through administrative processes that promote a sense of isolation and division, even within shared spaces. By defining and expanding the terms that drive public and scholarly conversations about postsecondary education, University Keywords situates what appear to be auxiliary aspects of colleges and universities as directly impacting and at times displacing the central academic mission of these institutions.

In its role as a crucible for societal hierarchies and economic interests, the university both drives and reflects major shifts in social structure, labor practices, and economic power. The book's exploration of key terms like "debt," "police," and "union" offers readers a new framework for understanding the university's transformation into an instrument of capital accumulation, as well as its ongoing relevance in the fight for a world where education, labor, and social justice converge.

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University Keywords

How American universities operate as social and economic engines that shape society beyond their traditional educational roles.

University Keywords gathers, contextualizes, and develops original understandings of 27 key terms that define the study and operation of the American university today. Editor Andy Hines and the book's contributors invite readers to rethink the university beyond its public image as a space of learning and understand how it also operates as a real estate powerhouse, a hedge fund, a debt machine, and even a crisis-producing entity embedded in the broader American economy.

Through essays written by over thirty contributors from a variety of disciplines, this book examines the university's intersecting functions, from its financial entanglements to its often-contradictory roles in society. Contributors illustrate how universities simultaneously link and separate communities—faculty, students, nurses, janitors, and the surrounding public—through administrative processes that promote a sense of isolation and division, even within shared spaces. By defining and expanding the terms that drive public and scholarly conversations about postsecondary education, University Keywords situates what appear to be auxiliary aspects of colleges and universities as directly impacting and at times displacing the central academic mission of these institutions.

In its role as a crucible for societal hierarchies and economic interests, the university both drives and reflects major shifts in social structure, labor practices, and economic power. The book's exploration of key terms like "debt," "police," and "union" offers readers a new framework for understanding the university's transformation into an instrument of capital accumulation, as well as its ongoing relevance in the fight for a world where education, labor, and social justice converge.

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University Keywords

University Keywords

University Keywords

University Keywords

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Overview

How American universities operate as social and economic engines that shape society beyond their traditional educational roles.

University Keywords gathers, contextualizes, and develops original understandings of 27 key terms that define the study and operation of the American university today. Editor Andy Hines and the book's contributors invite readers to rethink the university beyond its public image as a space of learning and understand how it also operates as a real estate powerhouse, a hedge fund, a debt machine, and even a crisis-producing entity embedded in the broader American economy.

Through essays written by over thirty contributors from a variety of disciplines, this book examines the university's intersecting functions, from its financial entanglements to its often-contradictory roles in society. Contributors illustrate how universities simultaneously link and separate communities—faculty, students, nurses, janitors, and the surrounding public—through administrative processes that promote a sense of isolation and division, even within shared spaces. By defining and expanding the terms that drive public and scholarly conversations about postsecondary education, University Keywords situates what appear to be auxiliary aspects of colleges and universities as directly impacting and at times displacing the central academic mission of these institutions.

In its role as a crucible for societal hierarchies and economic interests, the university both drives and reflects major shifts in social structure, labor practices, and economic power. The book's exploration of key terms like "debt," "police," and "union" offers readers a new framework for understanding the university's transformation into an instrument of capital accumulation, as well as its ongoing relevance in the fight for a world where education, labor, and social justice converge.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781421452364
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 09/09/2025
Series: Critical University Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 3 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Andy Hines is the senior associate director of the Aydelotte Foundation at Swarthmore College. He is the author of Outside Literary Studies: Black Criticism and the University.

Table of Contents

University: An Introduction, by Andy J. Hines
Academic Freedom, by Jennifer Ruth and Ellen Schrecker
Adjunct, by Heather Steffen
Admissions, by Scott M. Gelber
Alternative Institutions, by Andy J. Hines and Eli Meyerhoff
Athletics, by Wayne L. Black
Board of Trustees, by Asheesh Siddique Kapur
Budget, by Juan Pablo Pardo-Guerra
Campus, by Davarian L. Baldwin
Classroom, by Richard Simpson
Critical University Studies, by Rana M. Jaleel, Isaac Kamola, and Heather Steffen
Debt, by Eleni Schirmer and Jason Wozniak
Degree, by Christopher Newfield
Discipline, by Vineeta Singh
Diversity, by P.S. Kehal
EdTech, by Annie McClanahan and Louise McCune
Endowment, by Dennis M. Hogan
Entrepreneurship, by Jesse Goldstein
Fiction, by Jeffery J. Williams
Legislation, by Elizabeth Tandy Shermer
Noncitizen Student, by Abigail Boggs
Police, by Yalile Suriel and Grace Watkins
Ranking, by Jelena Brankovic and Stefan Wilbers
Revenue, by Dan Nemser and Brian Whitener
Risk Management, by Mattie Armstrong-Price
Sustainability, by Kai Bosworth, Jesse Goldstein, Andy J. Hines, and Eli Meyerhoff
Title IX, by Rana M. Jaleel
Union, by Zach Schwartz-Weinstein
Appendix: Questions to Consider for Composing a Keywords Entry
Contributor Bios
Acknowledgments
Index

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Another university is possible. But how do we imagine that university, given the limits and constraints of our system today? University Keywords is precisely the tool we need, as it helps scholars and activists develop a map of the future by offering a critical and nuanced picture of the present.
—Todd Wolfson, President of the American Association of University Professors

University Keywords could not be better timed. As a resurgent right wing distorts the university into a one-dimensional and fantastical enemy, this useful book helps us take stock of modern higher education in all of its complexity and contradictions, pitfalls and untapped potential. We urgently need to understand the university in order to defend it—and also so we can transform it to serve the common good.
—Astra Taylor, co-founder, Debt Collective

If the university's power lies in its ability to confound the very connections it fosters, as Andy Hines powerfully argues, then this book provides an antidote by assembling a dazzling array of writers who can help us link those aspects of the university often presumed disconnected.
—Roderick A. Ferguson, Yale University

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