This paper examines what to some is a well-worked furrow; the processes and outcomes involved in what is typically referred to as ‘marketization’ in the higher education sector. We do this through a case study of Newton University, where we reveal a rapid proliferation of market exchanges involving the administrative division of the university with the wider world. Our account of this process of ‘market making’ is developed in two (dialectically related) moves. First, we identify a range of market exchanges that have emerged in the context of wider ideological and political changes in the governance of higher education to make it a more globally competitive producer of knowledge, and a services sector. Second, we explore the ways in which m...
Markets and prices in higher education. When can we speak of markets, and when markets exist, how ar...
This article examines the growth of the higher education industry and specifically the expansion of ...
This paper examines the marketization of higher education. It takes the curriculum development for a...
This paper focuses on the question of how higher education is being transformed as a consequence of ...
This paper draws from a larger research project on marketization and market-making in the nascent hi...
This collection of short essays presents and examines six vignettes of organisational change in Brit...
This paper provides an overview of the development of markets in Australian higher education, with i...
This article considers notions of the market in UK higher education. It is argued that the economic ...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
Marketing and marketisation are not the same. However, it is not a simple task to disentangle one fr...
The introduction of market forces into higher education is the most crucial issue facing universitie...
This chapter will draw upon a critical cultural political economy approach to investigate the comple...
This paper uses the Economic Market mechanisms and the 4P Marketing Mix as lenses to review the cont...
Markets or market-like mechanisms are playing an increasing role in higher education, with visible c...
Markets and prices in higher education. When can we speak of markets, and when markets exist, how ar...
This article examines the growth of the higher education industry and specifically the expansion of ...
This paper examines the marketization of higher education. It takes the curriculum development for a...
This paper focuses on the question of how higher education is being transformed as a consequence of ...
This paper draws from a larger research project on marketization and market-making in the nascent hi...
This collection of short essays presents and examines six vignettes of organisational change in Brit...
This paper provides an overview of the development of markets in Australian higher education, with i...
This article considers notions of the market in UK higher education. It is argued that the economic ...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
Marketing and marketisation are not the same. However, it is not a simple task to disentangle one fr...
The introduction of market forces into higher education is the most crucial issue facing universitie...
This chapter will draw upon a critical cultural political economy approach to investigate the comple...
This paper uses the Economic Market mechanisms and the 4P Marketing Mix as lenses to review the cont...
Markets or market-like mechanisms are playing an increasing role in higher education, with visible c...
Markets and prices in higher education. When can we speak of markets, and when markets exist, how ar...
This article examines the growth of the higher education industry and specifically the expansion of ...
This paper examines the marketization of higher education. It takes the curriculum development for a...