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Constructing universities for democracy

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dc.contributor.author Kristinsson, Sigurður
dc.date.accessioned 2022-12-09T01:03:44Z
dc.date.available 2022-12-09T01:03:44Z
dc.date.issued 2022-11-17
dc.identifier.citation Kristinsson , S 2022 , ' Constructing universities for democracy ' , Studies in Philosophy and Education . https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-022-09853-5
dc.identifier.issn 0039-3746
dc.identifier.other 67995121
dc.identifier.other 1cdb712f-46be-45c2-8208-95fa6674c35d
dc.identifier.other 85142161257
dc.identifier.other unpaywall: 10.1007/s11217-022-09853-5
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/3698
dc.description Funding Information: This research was part of the project Universities and Democracy: A Critical Analysis of the Civic Role and Function of Universities in a Democracy, funded by the Icelandic Centre for Research (Rannís grant #184684). It was also made possible by a sabbatical leave granted by the University of Akureyri. Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s).
dc.description.abstract Universities can sharpen their commitment to democracy through institutional change. This might be resisted by a traditional understanding of universities. The question arises whether universities have defining purposes that demarcate possible university policy, strategic planning, and priority setting. These are significant questions because while universities are among our most stable long-term institutions, there is little consensus on what they are, what they are for, and what makes them valuable. This paper argues that universities can in fact be organized around a wide variety of purposes without thereby becoming any less real as universities. Normative discourse around universities should therefore be unafraid to consider novel ideas that test the limits of our current university concept and our entrenched practices. The argument applies fresh insights from feminist philosophy. Haslanger’s (Haslanger, S. 2000. Gender and race: (What) are they? (What) do we want them to be? Noûs 34(1), 31-55, Haslanger, S. 2005. What are we talking about? The semantics and politics of social kinds. Hypatia 20(4): 10-26, Haslanger, S. 2012. Resisting reality: Social construction and social critique. Oxford University Press.) ameliorative account of gender and race provides a model for how to frame novel and critical ideas about universities. Ásta’s (Ásta. 2018. Categories we live by: The construction of sex, gender, race, and other social categories. New York: Oxford University Press.) conferralist framework explains how universities are socially constructed and where our university concept, social behavior, and normative discourse fits into that construction. Stakeholders have the power to create the social fact of whether an institution is a university and what being a university means in each context. However, stakeholders are a heterogenous group and contemporary universities are fragmented institutions in desperate need for an ameliorative account that would guide their construction toward democratic value. That account can build on a distinction between valuing universities as expressions of democracy, its symbols, components, and causal agents.
dc.description.abstract Universities can sharpen their commitment to democracy through institutional change. This might be resisted by a traditional understanding of universities. The question arises whether universities have defining purposes that demarcate possible university policy, strategic planning, and priority setting. These are significant questions because while universities are among our most stable long-term institutions, there is little consensus on what they are, what they are for, and what makes them valuable. This paper argues that universities can in fact be organized around a wide variety of purposes without thereby becoming any less real as universities. Normative discourse around universities should therefore be unafraid to consider novel ideas that test the limits of our current university concept and our entrenched practices. The argument applies fresh insights from feminist philosophy. Haslanger’s (Haslanger, S. 2000. Gender and race: (What) are they? (What) do we want them to be? Noûs 34(1), 31-55, Haslanger, S. 2005. What are we talking about? The semantics and politics of social kinds. Hypatia 20(4): 10-26, Haslanger, S. 2012. Resisting reality: Social construction and social critique. Oxford University Press.) ameliorative account of gender and race provides a model for how to frame novel and critical ideas about universities. Ásta’s (Ásta. 2018. Categories we live by: The construction of sex, gender, race, and other social categories. New York: Oxford University Press.) conferralist framework explains how universities are socially constructed and where our university concept, social behavior, and normative discourse fits into that construction. Stakeholders have the power to create the social fact of whether an institution is a university and what being a university means in each context. However, stakeholders are a heterogenous group and contemporary universities are fragmented institutions in desperate need for an ameliorative account that would guide their construction toward democratic value. That account can build on a distinction between valuing universities as expressions of democracy, its symbols, components, and causal agents.
dc.format.extent 1015349
dc.format.extent
dc.language.iso en
dc.relation.ispartofseries Studies in Philosophy and Education; ()
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject ameliorative analysis
dc.subject democracy
dc.subject Haslanger
dc.subject higher education
dc.subject social construction
dc.subject the idea of a university
dc.subject University
dc.subject value theory
dc.subject Ásta
dc.subject Háskólar
dc.subject Lýðræði
dc.subject Education
dc.subject Philosophy
dc.title Constructing universities for democracy
dc.type /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontojournal/article
dc.description.version Peer reviewed
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s11217-022-09853-5
dc.relation.url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85142161257&partnerID=8YFLogxK
dc.contributor.school School of Humanities and Social Sciences


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