Intensifying marketisation across higher education (HE) in England continues to generate critical commentary on the potentially devastating consequences of market logic for learning. In this paper, we consider the student-consumer prominent in these debates as a contested yet under-analysed entity. In contrast to the dominance of homo economicus discursively constructed in policy, we offer a psychoanalytically-informed interpretation of undergraduate student narratives, in an educational culture in which the student is positioned as sovereign consumer. We report findings drawn from in-depth interviews that sought to investigate students’ experiences of choice within their university experience. Our critical interpretation shows how market i...
Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic com...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
We present data from an exploratory qualitative interview-based pedagogical research project on the ...
Intensifying marketisation across higher education (HE) in England continues to generate critical co...
The literature review revealed two opposing views of the ‘student as customer’; either it is conside...
The global Higher Education sector (HE) is undergoing a metamorphosis. No longer is HE the sole pres...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
This thesis explores the implications of the changes in the political and social conceptions of hig...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
Sociological research has documented effectively the ways in which the higher education landscape in...
In this paper we express concerns that the marketisation of British higher education that has accomp...
‘Students as consumers’ has become the dominant discourse applied to English undergraduate students ...
The restructuring of higher education according to neo-liberal market principles has constructed the...
In this chapter, we draw on an analysis of English policy documents and focus groups with students a...
Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic com...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
We present data from an exploratory qualitative interview-based pedagogical research project on the ...
Intensifying marketisation across higher education (HE) in England continues to generate critical co...
The literature review revealed two opposing views of the ‘student as customer’; either it is conside...
The global Higher Education sector (HE) is undergoing a metamorphosis. No longer is HE the sole pres...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
This thesis explores the implications of the changes in the political and social conceptions of hig...
As higher education (HE) has come to be valued for its contribution to the global economy, prioritie...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
Sociological research has documented effectively the ways in which the higher education landscape in...
In this paper we express concerns that the marketisation of British higher education that has accomp...
‘Students as consumers’ has become the dominant discourse applied to English undergraduate students ...
The restructuring of higher education according to neo-liberal market principles has constructed the...
In this chapter, we draw on an analysis of English policy documents and focus groups with students a...
Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic com...
Focusing primarily upon the higher education policies of the Coalition government of 2010-15, this p...
We present data from an exploratory qualitative interview-based pedagogical research project on the ...