The Governance of British Higher Education: The Impact of Governmental, Financial and Market Pressures: Bloomsbury Higher Education Research
Autor Professor Michael Shattock, Dr Aniko Horvathen Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 apr 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350205932
ISBN-10: 1350205931
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Higher Education Research
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350205931
Pagini: 224
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Higher Education Research
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Weaves together extensive interview programme in UK universities and governance with a thorough and lively review of the scholarly literature on governance and higher education
Notă biografică
Michael Shattock is Visiting Professor at IOE, UCL's Faculty of Education and Society, University College London, UK and Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Education at the University of Oxford, UK. He leads the research programme on the governance of higher education in the Centre for Global Higher Education (CGHE) at the University of Oxford, UK. Aniko Horvath is Assistant Professor in the Department of Organization Sciences at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and is Researcher at the Centre for Global Higher Education (CGHE) at the University of Oxford, UK.
Cuprins
Series Editor's ForewordAcknowledgementsList of AcronymsA Timeline1. Introduction2. The Transformation from a Self-Governed to a 'Regulated' Higher Education System3. The Impact of Devolved Government: Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and England4. The Changing Pattern of Institutional Governance5. University Governance and Academic Work: Pressures on Creativity and Innovation6. Globalization and Higher Education Governance7. The Strategic Implications of the Changing Governance Structures in British Higher EducationReferencesWorks CitedIndex
Recenzii
Breaks new and important ground as the first major empirical study of governance in this new policy climate ... This book undoubtedly represents a landmark in the study of higher education governance.
This volume . provides a sweeping overview of the divergent and contrasting developments in higher education governance in the four nations of the UK since the mis-70s . It covers a considerable amount of ground and offers commendably pithy and wide-ranging insights and judgements on the effects of changes in systems governance , UK devolution, globalisation, the marketisation of funding (particularly in England) and managerialism, and the consequences of all these for institutional missions and for teaching and research . No one could accuse its authors of shying away from meeting policy head on, or of not arriving at clear judgements about the relative efficacy of different policy models and trajectories.
During the past thirty years there have been tumultuous changes in higher education policy and administration. No-one is better qualified through practical experience and academic research than Michael Shattock to chronicle and analyse these events. He and Aniko Horvath have written the definitive account of them and their implications for the governance and management of UK universities and the sustainability of 2019 arrangements. Their book will come to be seen as a classic of the genre.
A superb overview of higher education across the four UK nations: broader, clearer and more coherent in its core argument than other recent works. It also creates a compelling picture of the global landscape in which the UK institutions sit, and focuses our attention on the curiously partial nature of their connection to that landscape. Without being at all strident or ideological, Shattock and Horvath have destroyed the premises on which contemporary UK policy is based - the assumptions that tighter state control, consumer markets and easy entry to commercial providers will somehow usher in a new flowering of quality, access, university autonomy and academic creativity.
An admirable assessment of the changes in system and institutional governance during a critical period. It updates Shattock's own previous work with new empirical evidence, razor sharp analysis and wise conclusions.
This book provides a sophisticated and comprehensive analysis of how British universities have been transformed, not always for the better, by government-led funding and management initiatives in recent decades. The comparison of the different countries of the United Kingdom and the discussion of the global environment are especially useful.
A masterpiece using the British devolution as a laboratory for higher education analysis. The exploration of the process by which England, Northern-Ireland, Scotland and Wales diverging policies have led to diverging region-based institutional governance and academic experiences is illuminating.
Although this is a book about the governance of British higher education, it is perhaps even more a book about autonomy and why it matters - at both institutional and individual level.
This volume . provides a sweeping overview of the divergent and contrasting developments in higher education governance in the four nations of the UK since the mis-70s . It covers a considerable amount of ground and offers commendably pithy and wide-ranging insights and judgements on the effects of changes in systems governance , UK devolution, globalisation, the marketisation of funding (particularly in England) and managerialism, and the consequences of all these for institutional missions and for teaching and research . No one could accuse its authors of shying away from meeting policy head on, or of not arriving at clear judgements about the relative efficacy of different policy models and trajectories.
During the past thirty years there have been tumultuous changes in higher education policy and administration. No-one is better qualified through practical experience and academic research than Michael Shattock to chronicle and analyse these events. He and Aniko Horvath have written the definitive account of them and their implications for the governance and management of UK universities and the sustainability of 2019 arrangements. Their book will come to be seen as a classic of the genre.
A superb overview of higher education across the four UK nations: broader, clearer and more coherent in its core argument than other recent works. It also creates a compelling picture of the global landscape in which the UK institutions sit, and focuses our attention on the curiously partial nature of their connection to that landscape. Without being at all strident or ideological, Shattock and Horvath have destroyed the premises on which contemporary UK policy is based - the assumptions that tighter state control, consumer markets and easy entry to commercial providers will somehow usher in a new flowering of quality, access, university autonomy and academic creativity.
An admirable assessment of the changes in system and institutional governance during a critical period. It updates Shattock's own previous work with new empirical evidence, razor sharp analysis and wise conclusions.
This book provides a sophisticated and comprehensive analysis of how British universities have been transformed, not always for the better, by government-led funding and management initiatives in recent decades. The comparison of the different countries of the United Kingdom and the discussion of the global environment are especially useful.
A masterpiece using the British devolution as a laboratory for higher education analysis. The exploration of the process by which England, Northern-Ireland, Scotland and Wales diverging policies have led to diverging region-based institutional governance and academic experiences is illuminating.
Although this is a book about the governance of British higher education, it is perhaps even more a book about autonomy and why it matters - at both institutional and individual level.