Aarhus Universitets segl

Universities and 에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트™Enterprise Culture에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트™

Research seminar with professor Wesley Shumar and postdoctoral fellow Rebecca Lund.

Oplysninger om arrangementet

Tidspunkt

torsdag 3. marts 2016, kl. 10:00 - fredag 4. marts 2016, kl. 12:00

Sted

Lokale A403, 에볼루션카지노, Aarhus Universitet, Campus Emdrup, Tuborgvej 164, 2400 K에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트benhavn NV


Wesley Shumar, Professor of Anthropology, Drexel University, Philadelphia, USA

How can universities learn from craft breweries?

Neoliberal approaches fragment the curriculum and assess the transmission of knowledge and skills at the university. At the same time, the advanced economy wants creative people with visions of a world that values more than the bottom line. An interesting development out of this dialectical contradiction is the craft economy.

Craft producers and consumers bring markets into being, whilst blurring the line between business and pleasure and embracing values beyond but not excluding the bottom line.

Could this more progressive view of entrepreneurship play an important role in the revitalization of higher education, moving it to support the development of the individual and the community?

Rebecca Lund, UNIKE postdoctoral fellow, 에볼루션카지노

Constructing the ideal academic: gendered practices of boasting in the neoliberal university

Universities are pressed by the OECD and EU to become 에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트˜enterprising institutions에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트™. This involves changes to academic cultures, characterized by the transfer of managerial practices and accounting logics.

In this seminar I unpack the social construction of 에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트œthe ideal academic에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트 in the context of such higher education reforms over the past two decades.

Drawing on a three-year ethnographic study of a Finnish University at the forefront of the 에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트˜enterprise에볼루션 카지노 웹사이트™ movement, I illustrate how this ideal is enacted in specific local settings through gendered (and classed) practices of boasting.

I show how an academic culture of boasting increasingly polarises those who succeed and those who fail to meet the new quality standards.

The seminar is free and open for all.