Australian universities were transformed from small colonial outposts of European education to a relatively large public higher education sector by national development funding. Neoliberal management since the 1980s has transformed the universities into export-oriented corporations, is placing severe stress on the younger workforce, and is generating a crisis in the production of an intellectual culture
The heavy reliance of Australian universities on international student tuition has been exposed by t...
In their provocative article, Halffman and Radder discuss the Kafkaesque worlds thatacademics in the...
Over the last decade, Australia has embarked on a quite unique tertiary education path of increasing...
This paper explores the impact of neoliberalism on Australia's public higher education system. It ex...
Since the introduction of neoliberal governance to higher education in Australia, following the 1988...
That this book, having been recommended for publication by the editors of Melbourne University Press...
The transformation of universities from public institutions to transnational business enterprises ha...
This paper proceeds from the view that managerial capture has already become a fundamental problem a...
Universities have undergone and are continuing to undergo radical changes in major English-speaking...
Australian universities, even more than British universities, are realisations of the nightmare in s...
Reforms in Australian higher education in the 1980s and 1990s have led to declining levels of real g...
The transformation of Australian universities from public institutions to transnational business ent...
This book deals with the current crisis facing Australian tertiary education, especially universitie...
Australia\u27s position on Asia\u27s doorstep and its ability to offer quality, English-speaking uni...
During the last decade, competition for funding and privatization transformed most Australian univer...
The heavy reliance of Australian universities on international student tuition has been exposed by t...
In their provocative article, Halffman and Radder discuss the Kafkaesque worlds thatacademics in the...
Over the last decade, Australia has embarked on a quite unique tertiary education path of increasing...
This paper explores the impact of neoliberalism on Australia's public higher education system. It ex...
Since the introduction of neoliberal governance to higher education in Australia, following the 1988...
That this book, having been recommended for publication by the editors of Melbourne University Press...
The transformation of universities from public institutions to transnational business enterprises ha...
This paper proceeds from the view that managerial capture has already become a fundamental problem a...
Universities have undergone and are continuing to undergo radical changes in major English-speaking...
Australian universities, even more than British universities, are realisations of the nightmare in s...
Reforms in Australian higher education in the 1980s and 1990s have led to declining levels of real g...
The transformation of Australian universities from public institutions to transnational business ent...
This book deals with the current crisis facing Australian tertiary education, especially universitie...
Australia\u27s position on Asia\u27s doorstep and its ability to offer quality, English-speaking uni...
During the last decade, competition for funding and privatization transformed most Australian univer...
The heavy reliance of Australian universities on international student tuition has been exposed by t...
In their provocative article, Halffman and Radder discuss the Kafkaesque worlds thatacademics in the...
Over the last decade, Australia has embarked on a quite unique tertiary education path of increasing...