Higher education in England is
being subjected to sustained marketisation with undergraduate degrees in arts,
humanities and social sciences now financed by student fees and the numbers cap
set to be lifted after 2015 (likely to be followed by the fees cap). Just as
the introduction of this market is centrally planned by Government, so
University management is increasingly centralised and its decisions implemented
via key performance indicators that purport to act as market proxies. In
this guest post, John Holmwood
discusses how at the University of Russelton - pre-1992 older sibling to the
post-1992 University of Poppleton - this brave new world is currently being
pursued via a central workload plan.
Wednesday 26 February 2014
Sunday 23 February 2014
The ‘wonderful freedom’ of neo-liberalism!
We are living in truly wonderful times.
Finally, we can choose freely our personal lifestyles without having to fear
being excluded from general society. Gender, different ethnic backgrounds, different
identities no longer matter in our neo-liberal society. Everybody has the
opportunity through the quality of his/her work to achieve their full potential
and creative capacity. We can be homosexual or heterosexual, this does no
longer matter in the public sphere. Same sex marriages are increasingly a
standard possibility, same sex couples can have children together. Life is full
of choices, which schools do we send our children to, state, religious or
private, whatever choice we make, it is possible. In which hospital do I want
to be treated? Everything is about consumer choice. Are we not living in truly
wonderful times? And yet, while the possibility of these different lifestyles is
clearly a positive step forward, at closer sight more sinister dynamics come to
the fore.
Monday 10 February 2014
Uneven development, unequal exchange and free trade: what implications for labour?
The notion of uneven and combined
development has attracted increased academic and activist attention. The
concept of unequal exchange, in turn, has been established for some time. What
has not been analysed is how these sets of capitalist dynamics intersect. In a
new article in the journal Globalizations,
entitled ‘Uneven
and combined development and unequal exchange: the second wind of neoliberal
‘free trade’?’, Adam David Morton and I analyse the way in which current
neoliberal ‘free trade’ policies are related to these fundamental capitalist
dynamics, deepening further processes of uneven and combined development as
well as unequal exchange. We also highlight the implications for labour as a
result of the widening uneven and combined development of neoliberalism.
Monday 3 February 2014
Globalisation and Resistance: critical engagements with neo-liberalism.
The global economic crisis
continues almost unabated and yet neo-liberalism still reigns supreme. In this
blog post, I bring together a range of book reviews, which all challenge
neo-liberal economics, point to its devastating effects on people’s lives as
well as reflect on alternatives. Together, this set of reviews intends to
provide a useful critical resource for discussions against the currently
dominant economic thinking.
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