As a critical nomenclature in Social Text, university points to a constellation of trends that coalesces around the corporate ethos of higher education: professionalization, academic capitalism, industry standardization, anti-intellectualism, managerialist protocols, adjunctifying professoriate, casualized instruction, knowledge factory, and the global university. As an interventionist journal of tendency, work published over the past thirty years has considered responses along intersecting organizational registers of the professional association, industrial union and party. These areas of inquiry are now embroiled in the phenomenon of the global university, or the proliferation of U.S and European academic outposts in the rest of the world. This complex terrain of global corporatization, neocolonial educative empires, and cross-cultural exchange calls for a renewed critical vigilance, particularly around the implications of university transnationalism for minor epistemologies in the arts and humanities.
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Fall 2009
Issue Editors
Research Article|
September 01 2009
Citation
Randy Martin, Eng-Beng Lim; University. Social Text 1 September 2009; 27 (3 (100)): 251–256. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/01642472-2009-049
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