Academic Fragilities in a Marketised Age: The Case of Chile

Academics are confronted with multiple and conflicting narratives as to what it is to be an academic. Their identities, however, are not entirely of their own making. Through a qualitative study, and deploying a social realist perspective, this paper analyses academic identities in Chile and attempt...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of educational studies 2013-06, Vol.61 (2), p.203-220
Hauptverfasser: Guzmán-Valenzuela, Carolina, Barnett, Ronald
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Barnett, Ronald
description Academics are confronted with multiple and conflicting narratives as to what it is to be an academic. Their identities, however, are not entirely of their own making. Through a qualitative study, and deploying a social realist perspective, this paper analyses academic identities in Chile and attempts to locate the patterns of identity in the context of a marketised higher education system. The data were collected in both a state and a private university. The results suggest that distinct kinds of fragilities may be emerging among Chilean academics (ontological and contractual fragilities). These two fragilities can be traced to the attendant structures of the university system at an institutional level (reputational fragility in the public sector and a branding fragility in the private sector). The paper concludes by observing that, although the power of the structures is considerable, there are still spaces for agentic responses.
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subjects academic identities
agentic responses
Colleges & universities
Higher education
marketised higher education system
Quality of education
School systems
social realist perspective
title Academic Fragilities in a Marketised Age: The Case of Chile
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