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Innes, J. M.; Morrison, Ben W. – Australian Universities' Review, 2022
We discuss developments in higher education in Australia through the lens of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic upon the provision of education and training in the discipline of psychology. Since its inception in universities after World War II, psychology educators in Australia have continually dealt with different, often conflicting, goals and…
Descriptors: Psychology, Case Studies, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Johnson, Louise – Australian Universities' Review, 2022
After 40 years as a hardworking and productive academic, here I was on a Zoom call fronting two senior colleagues telling me I no longer appeared on the new 'organisational chart'. In short, I was being made redundant. It was no surprise really, as another 40,000 professional and academic staff were to suffer the same fate. And really by then I…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Universities, Educational Practices
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Richards, Anne – Australian Universities' Review, 2021
This paper engages with current debate on the role of the university following COVID-19, exposing the ongoing corruption of traditional values of the tertiary sector, and the shift in teaching and learning expectations across the academy. It highlights the negative impact of the huge decline in government funding since the 1990s, salary inequity,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, College Role, COVID-19
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Thornton, Margaret – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
University law schools have been beset with a sense of schizophrenia ever since first established in the 19th century. They were unsure as to whether they were free to teach and research in the same way as the humanities or whether they were constrained by the presuppositions of legal practice. More recently, this tension has been overshadowed by…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions), Law Students, Neoliberalism
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Moore, Tim – Australian Universities' Review, 2020
Education Minister Tehan's recent announcement to double the cost of an Arts Degree has been a bombshell like no other in recent higher education policy. Many have rightly seen it as a policy that makes no practical sense -- if teachers are wanted, as is claimed in the overall policy, a sizeable number of these trained in the humanities are of…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Employment Potential
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Boyd, Bill; Grant, Aidre – Australian Universities' Review, 2019
The paper reflects whether it is too much to ask for a 'compassionate' university. It is an opinion piece as a response about how to make a shift against narratives that oppress, and how to respond positively to the 'compelling need for compassionate academic leadership in our universities' (Waddington, 2018, p.87). The authors draw on writers…
Descriptors: Universities, Institutional Characteristics, Politics of Education, Empathy
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Burford, James – Australian Universities' Review, 2017
The purpose of this article is to explore how we might understand "bad feelings" and their place in academic activism. The article begins with a proposition that higher education scholarship reproduces certain habits of thinking about affective practices and their political utility. Often "strong" feelings such as hope, anger,…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Activism, Homosexuality, Feminism
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Collins, Pauline – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
With globalising transnational corporate law firms, high rates of depression among law students and lawyers, and a changing role for lawyers in the world of dispute resolution, academics and professional bodies have been doing some soul searching. They are pondering just what is required in a law degree to train future lawyers adequately. This…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Legal Education (Professions), Relevance (Education), Educational Practices
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Riemer, Nick – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
If we want to combat contemporary "neoliberal" attacks on universities, we should start by refusing the way that their pseudo-rationalities already determine so many aspects of the intellectual and institutional regimes that we consider under threat. This paper sketches an analysis of those aspects of the internal practices of academia…
Descriptors: Humanities, Neoliberalism, Privatization, Educational Change
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Orr, Yancey; Orr, Raymond – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
Neoliberalism exults the ability of unregulated markets to optimise human relations. Yet, as David Graeber has recently illustrated, it is paradoxically built on rigorous systems of rules, metrics and managers. The potential transition to a market-based tuition and research-funding model for higher education in Australia has, not surprisingly,…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Higher Education, Universities, College Faculty
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Bonnell, Andrew G. – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
This paper proceeds from the view that managerial capture has already become a fundamental problem after a couple of decades of largely untrammelled managerialism in our public universities, and that this problem is likely to be compounded by further shifts towards deregulation and de facto privatisation, which is the direction that current…
Descriptors: Governance, Democratic Values, State Universities, Privatization
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Connell, Raewyn – Australian Universities' Review, 2015
This article is a condensed analysis of the developing sustainability crisis of Australian universities. It is based on an address to National Council of the National Tertiary Education Union, Melbourne, 3 October 2014. Thanks to all my fellow-members, who have kept my hopes for the modern university alive.
Descriptors: Knowledge Economy, Sustainability, Postsecondary Education, Global Approach
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Onsman, Andrys; Newton, Clare – Australian Universities' Review, 2015
In 2008, the University of Melbourne rolled out its restructured undergraduate degree program offerings. Rather than offering a multitude of faculty-specific degrees, the University started to offer a limited number of generalist degrees that serve as developmental pathways to specialist masters programs as well as stand-alone employment…
Descriptors: College Programs, Environment, Curriculum Evaluation, Curriculum Research
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Mitchell, Matthew – Australian Universities' Review, 2015
There is a perception that radical change in the higher education sector is inevitable. This paper argues that the university model of higher education is fundamentally sound and by implication, is not necessarily subject to the same forces acting on other industries. If changes are to affect higher education, these are likely to come from forces…
Descriptors: Success, Victims, Victims of Crime, Models
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Jones, Andee – Australian Universities' Review, 2015
The present article is the fourth in an unintended series charting the author's experiences of academic censure via social exclusion, or "amicable exclusion" as the Vietnamese reprint has it (Jones, 2012, 2013, 2014). Here in talking about academic censure, Jones touches on former psychoanalyst Jeffrey Mason's (1990) excoriation by the…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Censorship, Persuasive Discourse, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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