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This edited collection brings together a robust range of
philosophers who offer theoretically and critically informed
proposals regarding the aims, policies, and structures of the
university. The collection fills a major gap in the landscape of
higher education theory and practice while concurrently reviving a
long and often forgotten discourse within the discipline of
philosophy. It includes philosophers from across the globe
representing disparate philosophical schools, as well as various
career stages, statuses, and standpoints within the university.
There is also a diversity in method, approach and style, which
varies from personal narratives and case studies, to philosophical
genealogies, to traditional philosophical essays, and to systematic
theories. The collection can serve as a theoretical resource for
critically minded administrators and faculty who wish to analyze
and change policies and structures at their home institutions. It
will introduce them to a wide range of possible educational
imaginaries, as well as provide them with productive suggestions
for pragmatic change on campuses.
This edited collection brings together a robust range of
philosophers who offer theoretically and critically informed
proposals regarding the aims, policies, and structures of the
university. The collection fills a major gap in the landscape of
higher education theory and practice while concurrently reviving a
long and often forgotten discourse within the discipline of
philosophy. It includes philosophers from across the globe
representing disparate philosophical schools, as well as various
career stages, statuses, and standpoints within the university.
There is also a diversity in method, approach and style, which
varies from personal narratives and case studies, to philosophical
genealogies, to traditional philosophical essays, and to systematic
theories. The collection can serve as a theoretical resource for
critically minded administrators and faculty who wish to analyze
and change policies and structures at their home institutions. It
will introduce them to a wide range of possible educational
imaginaries, as well as provide them with productive suggestions
for pragmatic change on campuses.
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