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What is Corporatism

Handbook of Research on Ethical Challenges in Higher Education Leadership and Administration
Theory (ideology) and practice of having large, private sector firms individually or as groups influence governments, other institutions (e.g., higher education) in ways that benefit them rather than the social purposes for which they were established.
Published in Chapter:
Administrative Ethics in the Corporate College: Paradoxes, Dilemmas, and Contradictions
Howard A. Doughty (Seneca College, Canada)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4141-8.ch008
Abstract
Changes in the mission, organization, and administration of colleges and universities reflect the transformation from elite to mass to universal access institutions. Curriculum, pedagogy, academic standards, funding, and employer-employee relations have been transformed. Administration has increasingly become management in name and in nature, as the labor process of educational work mimics that of private-sector corporations. Meanwhile, the social purposes of higher education have shifted toward explicitly economic aims and away from intellectual pursuits. Colleges and universities increasingly pursue methods of technical and practical control over human and non-human nature in the interest of prosperity and progress. Academic values of open inquiry are compromised and largely eclipsed by market demands for employability skills and commercially based research. This chapter urges an ongoing critique of higher education in late capitalism, institutional governance reform, and critical interrogation of education as teachers and students address imminent and potentially catastrophic economic, ecological, and ethical problems.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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Andragogy and Higher Education in Late Capitalism: A Critique
A term used to refer to a pattern of social organization in which institutions such as colleges and universities come to adopt a labor process that mimics that of large-scale business, with reliance contract workers, commodification of curricula, and a market mentality that stresses consumer demand, innovation, and entrepreneurship over traditional academic values and any form of critical theory.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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