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Globalisation and the restructuring of higher education for new knowledge economies: new dangers or old habits troubling gender equity work in universities?

journal contribution
posted on 2002-01-01, 00:00 authored by Jillian BlackmoreJillian Blackmore
This article undertakes a feminist critique of the restructuring of the modern university in Australia. It considers the interaction of the processes of globalisation, corporatisation (through the twin strategies of marketisation and managerialism) and the social relations of gender, and their implication for gender equity work in the academy. The paper locates the reform of Australian universities within their Western context, and considers the gendered effects of the new disciplinary technologies of quality assurance and online learning on the position of women academics. It concludes with some comments about the shift in language from equity to diversity which has accompanied corporatisation, and how this has effectively coopted women's intellectual labour to do the work of the entrepreneurial university.

History

Journal

Higher education quarterly

Volume

56

Issue

4

Pagination

419 - 441

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Location

Oxford, England

ISSN

0951-5224

eISSN

1468-2273

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2002, Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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