This chapter explores the evolution of the political thought of Alasdair MacIntyre, from his time when he had worked as a political activist, as an academic, and for the Workers’ Education Association, teaching older, employed students who lacked the privileges of those brought up to enter Oxford or Cambridge, the LSE or Essex - to the summer of 2007 when he spoke at an industrial conflict at London Metropolitan University
Alasdair MacIntyre’s theory of the state is often viewed by critics as being unnecessarily hostile t...
The practical significance of critical theory, and student action leading to the hope of a new educa...
Student as Producer is a curricula for revolutionary teaching that emerged from inside an English un...
In what follows I shall consider what Alasdair MacIntyre has to say about utopianism, from the stand...
This essay features as part of a collection of essays that explore the implications of Alasdair MacI...
Although Alasdair MacIntyre is best known today as the author of "After Virtue" (1981), he was, in t...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s Ethics in the Conflict of Modernity (2016) caps a long engagement with Marx and...
There is much talk of =the crisis‘ in higher education, often expressed in fatalistic narratives abo...
In different ways, Alasdair MacIntyre and Pierre Bourdieu owe an intellectual and political debt to ...
Peter Jarvis emphasised relationships in education: people in the West assumed we were born as indiv...
Alasdair Macintyre asserts in After Virtue that contemporary moral discourse is only arbitrary asser...
The review of the book by John Gregson, devoted to the early stage of the formation of the moral ph...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory presents a complex argument that sp...
“There is a very unpleasant fate which is reserved for those in the university who spend most of the...
This paper is an examination of certain assumptions that, I hold, lie in the background of MacInty...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s theory of the state is often viewed by critics as being unnecessarily hostile t...
The practical significance of critical theory, and student action leading to the hope of a new educa...
Student as Producer is a curricula for revolutionary teaching that emerged from inside an English un...
In what follows I shall consider what Alasdair MacIntyre has to say about utopianism, from the stand...
This essay features as part of a collection of essays that explore the implications of Alasdair MacI...
Although Alasdair MacIntyre is best known today as the author of "After Virtue" (1981), he was, in t...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s Ethics in the Conflict of Modernity (2016) caps a long engagement with Marx and...
There is much talk of =the crisis‘ in higher education, often expressed in fatalistic narratives abo...
In different ways, Alasdair MacIntyre and Pierre Bourdieu owe an intellectual and political debt to ...
Peter Jarvis emphasised relationships in education: people in the West assumed we were born as indiv...
Alasdair Macintyre asserts in After Virtue that contemporary moral discourse is only arbitrary asser...
The review of the book by John Gregson, devoted to the early stage of the formation of the moral ph...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory presents a complex argument that sp...
“There is a very unpleasant fate which is reserved for those in the university who spend most of the...
This paper is an examination of certain assumptions that, I hold, lie in the background of MacInty...
Alasdair MacIntyre’s theory of the state is often viewed by critics as being unnecessarily hostile t...
The practical significance of critical theory, and student action leading to the hope of a new educa...
Student as Producer is a curricula for revolutionary teaching that emerged from inside an English un...