Abstract

What we critically ascertain in this essay is how the modern university is increasingly drifting away from the key ambitions of its own mission statement, and largely by its own doing. Although the typical university in its mission statement claims to aspire outstanding quality, academic freedom, and to contribute to society, in its daily organization, the modern university has normalized and internalized a neoliberal metrical governmentality, in which quality, freedom, and societal benefit risk being exchanged for quantity, managerial control, and status benefit. In this essay, we stand up against this worrying self-harming protection strategy, what we term—following Jacques Derrida—the autoimmunity of the university. To structure our argument, we will discern the main worrying autoimmune paradoxes of this university policy in the hope to further the debate and potentially remedy the university of this self-inflicted harm.

Highlights

  • What we critically ascertain in this essay is how the modern university is increasingly drifting away from the key ambitions of its own mission statement, and largely by its own doing

  • What we have put forward in this speaking out essay, is, that in its attempt to counter the apocalyptical pictured neoliberal competition, the management of a typical university is responding in a Derridean self-harming reflex of power

  • The university risks turning itself into a mere corporate factory of publications and diplomas, in which quantity is mistaken for quality and control for freedom, thereby derailing itself further and further from its societal function and orientation

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Summary

Speaking Out

The autoimmunity of the modern university: How its managerialism is self-harming what it claims to protect. Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions httpDs:O//dIo: i1.o0r.g1/1107.171/1773/5103500580482402909775533447 journals.sagepub.com/home/org

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