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This Open Access book analyses the past, present and future of the
technical university as a single faculty independent institution.
The point of departure is a view of changing academic realities,
through which the identity as a technical university is challenged
and reconstituted. More specifically, the book connects the
development of technical universities to changes in the structure
and dimensioning of national higher education systems, to changes
in the disciplinary basis of academic research and to changes in
the governance of higher education institutions. Introduced in the
age of industrialization, polytechnical schools rose to prominence
in many national settings during the second half of the 19th
century. Over time, new technologies have been developed and
incorporated into the repertoire, and waves of academisation have
swept over the former polytechnics, transforming them into
technical universities. Their traditions and brands, however,
prevail. Several technical universities are included among the most
prestigious academic institutions of their nations and the training
of engineers and engineering research still enjoys a high level of
prestige and national priority, e.g. in the context of innovation
and industrial policy. But the world keeps changing, and the higher
education sector with it. Will technical universities have an
equally attractive position within university systems in the
decades to come?
This Open Access book analyses the past, present and future of the
technical university as a single faculty independent institution.
The point of departure is a view of changing academic realities,
through which the identity as a technical university is challenged
and reconstituted. More specifically, the book connects the
development of technical universities to changes in the structure
and dimensioning of national higher education systems, to changes
in the disciplinary basis of academic research and to changes in
the governance of higher education institutions. Introduced in the
age of industrialization, polytechnical schools rose to prominence
in many national settings during the second half of the 19th
century. Over time, new technologies have been developed and
incorporated into the repertoire, and waves of academisation have
swept over the former polytechnics, transforming them into
technical universities. Their traditions and brands, however,
prevail. Several technical universities are included among the most
prestigious academic institutions of their nations and the training
of engineers and engineering research still enjoys a high level of
prestige and national priority, e.g. in the context of innovation
and industrial policy. But the world keeps changing, and the higher
education sector with it. Will technical universities have an
equally attractive position within university systems in the
decades to come?
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