Universities in the UK are increasingly adopting corporate governance structures, a consumerist model of teaching and learning, and have the most expensive tuition fees in the world (McGettigan, 2013; OECD, 2015). This paper discusses collaborative research that aimed to develop and define a conceptual framework of knowledge production grounded in co-operative values and principles. The main findings are outlined relating to the key themes of our research: knowledge, democracy, bureaucracy, livelihood, and solidarity. We consider how these five 'catalytic principles' relate to three identified routes to co-operative higher education (conversion, dissolution, or creation) and argue that such work must be grounded in an adequate critique of l...
We are witnessing an “assault” on universities (Bailey and Freedman, 2011) and the future of higher ...
The last 3 decades have witnessed the rise of reforms aimed at conjoining Canadian universities to t...
This report explores the possibility of co-operative leadership for higher education. The report is ...
Universities in the UK are increasingly adopting corporate governance structures, a consumerist mode...
In 2010, following a policy review into higher education in England (Browne, 2010), the newly electe...
This report provides an interim account of a participatory action research project undertaken during...
A paper for the 'Co-operative higher education/What next for the co-operative university?' panel at ...
This paper develops a critical analysis of 'intellectual leadership' in the University, and identifi...
This reports on recent research into co-operative leadership which aims to support co-operative high...
“What we want and seek to obtain is a co-operative journey that will end in a co-operative universit...
Offering a proposal for how the gap in discussions of co-operative Higher Education around research ...
Recent, highly visible, struggles in Higher Education in the UK, such as the pensions strike, have a...
The academic has no apparent autonomy beyond the temporary amelioration of her labour relations wit...
This article considers the impact of the new Consumer Rights Act 2016 and the Higher Education an...
As an introduction to the themed issue, this paper interrogates the idea of university unbundling th...
We are witnessing an “assault” on universities (Bailey and Freedman, 2011) and the future of higher ...
The last 3 decades have witnessed the rise of reforms aimed at conjoining Canadian universities to t...
This report explores the possibility of co-operative leadership for higher education. The report is ...
Universities in the UK are increasingly adopting corporate governance structures, a consumerist mode...
In 2010, following a policy review into higher education in England (Browne, 2010), the newly electe...
This report provides an interim account of a participatory action research project undertaken during...
A paper for the 'Co-operative higher education/What next for the co-operative university?' panel at ...
This paper develops a critical analysis of 'intellectual leadership' in the University, and identifi...
This reports on recent research into co-operative leadership which aims to support co-operative high...
“What we want and seek to obtain is a co-operative journey that will end in a co-operative universit...
Offering a proposal for how the gap in discussions of co-operative Higher Education around research ...
Recent, highly visible, struggles in Higher Education in the UK, such as the pensions strike, have a...
The academic has no apparent autonomy beyond the temporary amelioration of her labour relations wit...
This article considers the impact of the new Consumer Rights Act 2016 and the Higher Education an...
As an introduction to the themed issue, this paper interrogates the idea of university unbundling th...
We are witnessing an “assault” on universities (Bailey and Freedman, 2011) and the future of higher ...
The last 3 decades have witnessed the rise of reforms aimed at conjoining Canadian universities to t...
This report explores the possibility of co-operative leadership for higher education. The report is ...