This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in the context of audit, accountability and control surrounding new managerialism in UK Business Schools. Drawing upon empirical research, we illustrate how rather than resisting an ever-proliferating array of governmental technologies of power, academics chase the illusive sense of a secure self through ‘careering’; a frantic and frenetic individualistic strategy designed to moderate the pressures of excessive managerial competitive demands. Emerging from our data was an increased portrayal of academics as subjected to technologies of power and self, simultaneously being objects of an organizational gaze through normalizing judgements, hierarchic...
Leadership, downshifting and the experience of power in higher education Copyright © 2015 Rachel C...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the themes of professionalism and managerialism in how academic...
This study considers academic identity and the performance of identity work in the context of the de...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper contributes to a growing literature on new public management in relation to academia in g...
This paper contributes to a growing literature on new public management in relation to academia in g...
The expansion and specialisation of 'non-academic' higher education roles, in response to increased ...
Over the last twenty years the liberal university has increasingly been transformed into the neolibe...
This chapter addresses the issue of how academics, more specifically business school academics, have...
This article examines the relationship between managerialism and academic professionalism in English...
The academic identity is under attack. There are many tensions academics face; what does it mean to ...
Reforms focusing on privatization, deregulation, and cutbacks have increasingly drawn professional s...
In this paper, drawing on the work of Michel Foucault, I argue that academics are enmeshed in power ...
An extensive literature has focused on the impact of new public management (NPM) oriented structural...
This paper is focused on understanding how identity work unfolds along the learning trajectory of Ph...
Leadership, downshifting and the experience of power in higher education Copyright © 2015 Rachel C...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the themes of professionalism and managerialism in how academic...
This study considers academic identity and the performance of identity work in the context of the de...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper contributes to a growing literature on new public management in relation to academia in g...
This paper contributes to a growing literature on new public management in relation to academia in g...
The expansion and specialisation of 'non-academic' higher education roles, in response to increased ...
Over the last twenty years the liberal university has increasingly been transformed into the neolibe...
This chapter addresses the issue of how academics, more specifically business school academics, have...
This article examines the relationship between managerialism and academic professionalism in English...
The academic identity is under attack. There are many tensions academics face; what does it mean to ...
Reforms focusing on privatization, deregulation, and cutbacks have increasingly drawn professional s...
In this paper, drawing on the work of Michel Foucault, I argue that academics are enmeshed in power ...
An extensive literature has focused on the impact of new public management (NPM) oriented structural...
This paper is focused on understanding how identity work unfolds along the learning trajectory of Ph...
Leadership, downshifting and the experience of power in higher education Copyright © 2015 Rachel C...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the themes of professionalism and managerialism in how academic...
This study considers academic identity and the performance of identity work in the context of the de...