Struggling for visibility in higher education: caught between neoliberalism 'out there' and 'in here' - an autoethnographic account

Date
2016-11-01Author
Warren, Simon
Metadata
Show full item recordUsage
This item's downloads: 503 (view details)
Cited 18 times in Scopus (view citations)
Recommended Citation
Warren, Simon. (2016). Struggling for visibility in higher education: caught between neoliberalism ‘out there’ and ‘in here’ – an autoethnographic account. Journal of Education Policy, 1-14. doi: 10.1080/02680939.2016.1252062
Published Version
Abstract
What happens when neoliberalism as a structural and structuring force is
taken up within institutions of higher education, and works upon academics
in higher education individually? Employing a critical authoethnographic
approach, this paper explores the way technologies of research performance
management, specifically, work to produce academics (and academic
managers) as particular kinds of neoliberal subject. The struggle to make
oneself visible is seen to occur under the gaze of academic normativity the
norms of academic practice that include both locally negotiated practices
and the performative demands of auditing and metrics that characterise
the neoliberal university. The paper indicates how the dual process of being
worked upon and working upon ourselves can produce personally harmful
effects. The result is a process of systemic violence. This paper invites higher
education workers and policy-makers to think higher education otherwise
and to reconsider our personal and collective complicity in the processes
shaping higher education.