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Emily J. Levine; Mitchell L. Stevens – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
For two centuries, academics and their universities have competed for prominence and vied to demonstrate that their institutions are at the center of the scholarly world. Scientific advances in particular fields, reciprocal academic visits and conferences, impressive physical architecture, and publishing in shared venues and a "lingua…
Descriptors: Competition, Higher Education, Reputation, Institutional Characteristics
Barrett J. Taylor; Brendan Cantwell – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
Existing scholarship tends to understand university governance structurally (emphasizing formal authority and resource environments), culturally (focusing on history, norms, and leadership), or by combining both approaches (Kezar & Eckel, 2004). These models understand governance in instrumental terms, as the means for steering the university.…
Descriptors: Universities, Governance, Cultural Context, Administrative Organization
Jason Cong Lin; Yuting Shen – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2024
Since 1840, Chinese political leaders have struggled to draw effectively from Western culture without abandoning the Chinese essence in their design of higher education. In this paper, we use cultural nationalism as the theoretical framework to examine how Chinese political leaders have responded to this challenge. Our analysis shows that cultural…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Nationalism, Politics of Education, Cultural Maintenance
Joy Ann Williamson-Lott – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2024
In the middle of the 20th century, trustees, elected officials, and others in the southern United States required black and white institutions to forfeit academic freedom protections when faculty research and teaching threatened to undermine white supremacy. In the early 21st century, faculty who critique white supremacy are facing similar attacks…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Democracy, Educational History, United States History