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Public Universities and Neoliberal Common Sense: Seven Iconoclastic Thesis
Place of publication | Year of publication | Collation: 
Buenos Aires | 2014 | pp. 18-31
ISBN/ISSN: 
ISSN 2408-4573
Author: 
Carlos Alberto Torres
Corporate author: 
Universidad Nacional de Tres de Febrero (UNTREF)
Region: 
Europe and North America
Latin America and the Caribbean
Global

Neoliberalism has utterly failed as a viable model of economic development, yet the politics of culture associated with neoliberalism is still in force, becoming the new common sense shaping the role of government and education. This ‘common sense’ has become an ideology playing a major role in constructing hegemony as moral and intellectual leadership in contemporary societies. Neoliberal globalisation, predicated on the dominance of the market over the state and on deregulatory models of governance, has deeply affected the university in the context of ‘academic capitalism’. The resulting reforms, rationalised as advancing international competitiveness, have affected public universities in four primary areas: efficiency and accountability, accreditation and universalisation, international competitiveness and privatisation. There is also growing resistance to globalisation as top-down-imposed reforms reflected in the public debates about schooling reform, curriculum and instruction, teacher training and school governance. Many question whether neoliberal reforms attempt to limit the effectiveness of universities as sites of contestation of the national and global order and thus undermine the broader goals of education. Neoliberal reforms have limited access and opportunity along class and racial lines, including limiting access to higher education through the imposition of higher tuition and reduced government support to institutions and individuals.

Files: 
Resource Type: 
Research papers / journal articles
Theme: 
Globalisation and social justice / International understanding
Level of education: 
Higher education
Keywords: 
globalization