Captured by the Discourse? The Socially Constitutive Power of New Higher Education Discourse in the UK
- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organization
- Vol. 8 (2) , 183-201
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1350508401082005
Abstract
This paper addresses the extent to which academic staff are ‘captured’ by the discourse associated with the ‘new higher education’ (NHE) in the UK and identifies the factors which condition their ability to displace, negotiate, reconstruct and create alternative discourses. In addressing this task, the paper draws on data from a five-year ethnographic study of an English university, NewU, a single document from NewU published after that study, a comparative study of ‘new’ academics in England and Canada, and spontaneous textual data produced at a conference on higher education. The paper concludes that the dialogical nature of universities means that the impact of NHE discourse on organizational practices is mitigated as it is read and reacted to in varied ways: that academics are not fundamentally ‘captured’ by this discursive form. However, caution is advised in extending this argument too far.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Limits of Discourse Analysis in Organizational AnalysisOrganization, 2000
- Organizing Processes in Complex Activity NetworksOrganization, 2000
- Communities of Practice and Social Learning SystemsOrganization, 2000
- Comment on Wenger and Yanow. Knowing in Practice: A `Delicate Flower' in the Organizational Learning FieldOrganization, 2000
- What managerialists Forget: Higher education credit frameworks and managerialist ideologyInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 1998
- 'New managerialism' and higher education: The management of performances and cultures in universities in the United KingdomInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 1998
- Producing and practising social justice policy in education: A policy trajectory study from queensland, AustraliaInternational Studies in Sociology of Education, 1997
- Angels in marble? Accrediting prior experiential learning in higher educationStudies in Higher Education, 1996
- The ‘McDonaldization’ of Higher Education: food for thought?Oxford Review of Education, 1995
- Captured by the Discourse? Issues and concerns in researching ‘parental choice‘British Journal of Sociology of Education, 1994