Contemporary debates about academic freedom and institutional autonomy in South Africa's `liberal' universities began in the 1950s, stimulated by the policies and legislation for racial segregation.1 While the form that these debates had taken has differed from university to university, the University of Cape Town stands as a good case study for the arguments and counterarguments that have been made through the years. In this essay, I trace these arguments from the middle of the last century through to the present, and show that different positions remain unreconciled, suggesting in turn a lack of consensus about the role of the university in contemporary South African society. South African Journal of Higher Education Vol. 20 (3) 2006: 370...
The real point of democratic reform, what I have been calling institutional reform, is not just to c...
Although the cradle of university education is traced to Africa, modern university education in Afri...
In this commentary, we engage with Yunus Ballim's article in this issue that explores how academic f...
Contemporary debates about academic freedom and institutional autonomy in South Africa's 'liberal' u...
Academic freedom and institutional autonomy are often assumed to be synonymous. In some debates abou...
The limits of academic freedom are disputed in South African contexts, as elsewhere. The recent Rhod...
Invocations and defenses of academic freedom in South Africa should not necessarily be taken at face...
In South Africa, Academic Freedom Lectures usually take place within the context of the Regime/State...
Academic freedom can be invoked to index different claims. According to Moodie (1996), there are thr...
The purpose of this meeting is as I see it, twofold: a reaffirmation of a commitment and a protest. ...
This article argues that in post-apartheid South Africa, the discourse on academic freedom is conjoi...
The purpose of this article is to attempt a surfacing of the assumptions and discourses surrounding ...
This article portrays four historically evolved ideas of a university, as they have developed in the...
Throughout the history of universities, university autonomy and academic freedom have come ~o be re...
South African universities are under pressure to alter their institutional cultures and policies in ...
The real point of democratic reform, what I have been calling institutional reform, is not just to c...
Although the cradle of university education is traced to Africa, modern university education in Afri...
In this commentary, we engage with Yunus Ballim's article in this issue that explores how academic f...
Contemporary debates about academic freedom and institutional autonomy in South Africa's 'liberal' u...
Academic freedom and institutional autonomy are often assumed to be synonymous. In some debates abou...
The limits of academic freedom are disputed in South African contexts, as elsewhere. The recent Rhod...
Invocations and defenses of academic freedom in South Africa should not necessarily be taken at face...
In South Africa, Academic Freedom Lectures usually take place within the context of the Regime/State...
Academic freedom can be invoked to index different claims. According to Moodie (1996), there are thr...
The purpose of this meeting is as I see it, twofold: a reaffirmation of a commitment and a protest. ...
This article argues that in post-apartheid South Africa, the discourse on academic freedom is conjoi...
The purpose of this article is to attempt a surfacing of the assumptions and discourses surrounding ...
This article portrays four historically evolved ideas of a university, as they have developed in the...
Throughout the history of universities, university autonomy and academic freedom have come ~o be re...
South African universities are under pressure to alter their institutional cultures and policies in ...
The real point of democratic reform, what I have been calling institutional reform, is not just to c...
Although the cradle of university education is traced to Africa, modern university education in Afri...
In this commentary, we engage with Yunus Ballim's article in this issue that explores how academic f...