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Bruce Macfarlane – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Higher education seems to be in a perpetual state of 'crisis'. The many hundreds of books and papers containing this specific, or other relevantly similar expressions, convey a sense of fear and angst. Yet, what are these various crises about, and which values and beliefs are seen as threatened or 'under attack'? This paper will provide an…
Descriptors: Ideology, Higher Education, Educational Change, Politics of Education
Leiviskä, Anniina – Educational Theory, 2023
In this paper, Anniina Leiviskä examines the moral, political, and epistemic claims of the social justice movement known as "decolonizing the university" from the perspective of Jürgen Habermas's distinction between objective and normative validity and the respective notions of truth and moral rightness. Leiviskä challenges the view,…
Descriptors: Moral Values, Political Issues, Social Justice, Decolonization
Cook, Philip – Theory and Research in Education, 2023
For Martin, the right to free higher education may be claimed only by those ready and willing pursue autonomy supporting higher education. The unready and unwilling, among whom may be counted carers, disabled, and devout, are excluded. This is unjust. I argue that this injustice follows from a tension between three elements of Martin's argument:…
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Access to Education, Higher Education, Personal Autonomy
Misiaszek, Greg William; Rodrigues, Cae – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
In this short article, we pose six key questions that we argue as essential to critically problem-pose in achieving teaching for justice-based environmental sustainability (JBES) in higher education (HE). We will be critically posing these questions to all the authors of an upcoming Teaching in Higher Education special issue 'Higher Education…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Environmental Education, Sustainability, Higher Education
Brust, Caitlin Murphy; Taylor, Rebecca M. – Educational Theory, 2023
In this paper, Caitlin Murphy Brust and Rebecca Taylor examine the responsibilities of college educators to resist conditions of epistemic injustice within their institutions. Pedagogy alone cannot bring about epistemic justice in higher education, for no individual epistemic agent can single-handedly transform their epistemic environment. The…
Descriptors: Resistance (Psychology), Epistemology, Social Justice, Higher Education
Desmarchelier, Renee; Cary, Lisa J. – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2022
The current historic COVID-19 Pandemic moment has thrown into sharp relief the need for flexible and rigorous higher education that meets upskilling and reskilling needs of global workforces. Discussions of micro-credentialing predate the Pandemic but have received increased focus as potentially assisting in addressing perceived skills gaps.…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Equal Education, Credentials, Foreign Countries
Joseph Jeyaraj, Joanna; Gandolfi, Franco – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2022
In this paper, servant leadership and critical pedagogy are amalgamated to explore how aspirations for a greater measure of social justice may be addressed within higher education. A preliminary framework is proposed based on three concepts from critical pedagogy: trust, dialogue, and empowerment. In-depth discussion precipitates valuable insights…
Descriptors: Student Empowerment, Social Justice, Critical Theory, Leadership Styles
Rozana Carducci; Jordan Harper; Adrianna Kezar – Johns Hopkins University Press, 2024
"Higher Education Leadership" offers a groundbreaking exploration of leadership in higher education. Rozana Carducci, Jordan Harper, and Adrianna Kezar challenge traditional paradigms and ideologies that hinder progress--advocating instead for liberatory systemic change. The authors highlight new and evolving interdisciplinary leadership…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Leadership Styles, Interdisciplinary Approach, Systems Approach
Laura Alonso Martínez; María Begoña Vigo-Arrazola – Health Education, 2024
Purpose: Government's role and sex education are vital in promoting inclusivity and sexual health. To understand the impact that the legislation has had on sex education, it is necessary to evaluate it at the different training levels. Design/methodology/approach: The method used is a critical review aimed at comparing educational and state…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sex Education, Educational Legislation, Social Justice
Nicole King; Tahira Mahdi; Sarah Fouts – Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, 2024
This Projects With Promise case study offers insights for addressing tensions between universities and communities in building partnerships and collectively rethinking "the field" of community engagement. We explore moving beyond a solely place-based understanding of "the field" into an ethos based on human interactions and…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Community Involvement, Ethics, Community Development
Kerry Chappell; Katherine Natanel; Heather Wren – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
Alongside the neoliberalisation of UK Higher Education (HE), the values of speed, competition, marketisation and individualism increasingly shape teaching and learning globally. This article takes seriously the feeling of unease expressed by lecturers and students in this context, proposing that posthumanism offers a theoretical, methodological…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Neoliberalism, Foreign Countries, Humanism
Emily Tarconish; Sally Scott; Manju Banerjee; Allison Lombardi – Journal of Postsecondary Education and Disability, 2023
Universal Design (UD), a theory that encompasses a proactive approach to accessibility and inclusion, has spread from its roots in architecture and product design to a host of applications including educational contexts. Over more than two decades, applications of UD in postsecondary settings have undergone exponential growth. In this theoretical…
Descriptors: Usability, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Diversity
Lund, Rebecca W. B. – Gender and Education, 2023
This article explores affective alignment and epistemic polarization in the field of feminist research, resulting from the neoliberalization of the universities and a performance-oriented research economy. Previous research has described and analysed the 'epistemic splitting' that feminist scholars engage in to live up to standardized performance…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Feminism, Educational Research, Neoliberalism
Ezell, Jerel M. – Journal of Education, 2023
Recent racial justice protests in response to police-related brutality in the U.S. illuminate tensions reflective of persistent power differentials and social and racial traumas of which the U.S. education system has played a pronounced role in both historically producing and, more recently, reproducing by trafficking in an "ethos" of…
Descriptors: Racism, Social Justice, Social Bias, Higher Education
Mikulan, Petra – Educational Theory, 2022
To address an ethics of refusal in higher education is to wager in the name of future possibles not already governed by the extractive politics of colonial progress and oppressive regimes of knowing and doing. In this essay, Petra Mikulan shows American pragmatism to have always been, in a certain sense, post-Anthropocene in its condition of…
Descriptors: Ethics, Higher Education, Politics of Education, Colonialism