ABSTRACT

Capturing the voices of Americans living with student debt in the United States, this collection critiques the neoliberal interest-driven, debt-based system of U.S. higher education and offers alternatives to neoliberal capitalism and the corporatized university. Grounded in an understanding of the historical and political economic context, this book offers auto-ethnographic experiences of living in debt, and analyzes alternatives to the current system. Chapter authors address real questions such as, Do collegians overestimate the economic value of going to college? and How does the monetary system that student loans are part of operate? Pinpointing how developments in the political economy are accountable for students’ university experiences, this book provides an authoritative contribution to research in the fields of educational foundations and higher education policy and finance.

 

part I|72 pages

Critical Perspectives on Financing Higher Education in the United States

chapter 1|16 pages

Financing Higher Education in the United States

A Historical Overview of Loans in Federal Financial Aid Policy

chapter 3|14 pages

African American Student Loan Debt

Deferring the Dream of Higher Education

part II|85 pages

The Debt That Won’t Go Away

chapter 5|12 pages

The Rise of the Adjuncts

Neoliberalism Invades the Professoriate

chapter 6|12 pages

“BFAMFAPhD”

An Adjunct Professor’s Personal Experience With Student Debt Long After Leaving Graduate School

chapter 7|13 pages

Debt(s) We Can’t Walk Out On

National Adjunct Walkout Day, Complicity, and the Neoliberal Threat to Social Movements in the Academy

chapter 8|11 pages

Misplaced Faith in the American Dream

Buried in Debt in the Catacombs of the Ivory Tower

chapter 10|15 pages

“Golden Years” in the Red

Student Loan Debt as Economic Slavery

chapter 11|9 pages

Should I Go Back to College?

part III|110 pages

Alternatives to American Neoliberal Financing of Higher Education

chapter 12|16 pages

Free Tuition

Prospects for Extending Free Schooling Into the Postsecondary Years

chapter 16|18 pages

Reflections on the Future

Setting the Agenda for a Post-Neoliberal U.S. Higher Education