ABSTRACT

With contributions from six leading scientific countries of the Global North and from the general European Higher Education Area, this book questions the predominant view on academic freedom and pleads for a holistic approach.

While academic freedom has been a top agenda point for the global scientific community in recent years, the public and academic discourse has often been marked by a negative interpretation of the term understood merely as exemption from state intervention and censorship. The contributions in this edited volume demonstrate, however, that this is not where the story ends: the ability to exercise academic freedom not only involves the freedom of expression in its abstract sense but should involve the capability to determine research agendas and curricula independently from market pressures or threats of career sabotage, and to resist workplace misconduct without fear of losing future career chances.

Providing a differentiated picture of contemporary structural limits to academic freedom in advanced democracies, this volume will be of great interest for not only scholars of higher education, but for the entire academic community.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

part 1|62 pages

The Neoliberal Restructuration of University

chapter Chapter 1|23 pages

The Chair

A Short History of Structural Unfreedom, Anti-Democracy, and Disenfranchisement in German Academia

chapter Chapter 2|19 pages

What Is Tenure?

chapter Chapter 3|18 pages

Disability Studies as a Subaltern Discipline

part 2|50 pages

The Academic Precariat between Coping and Resistance

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

Living on the Edge

Continuous Precarity Undermines Academic Freedom but Not Researchers' Identity in Neoliberal Academia

chapter Chapter 5|8 pages

Academic Freedoms of Fixed-Term Researchers in Italy

Aggravating Occupational Precarity

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Disappearing Freedoms

On Intersections of Career and Labor in Nordic Countries

part 3|42 pages

When Political and Economic Precarities Intersect

chapter Chapter 7|20 pages

“Our University Is Exploiting Us”

Migrant Students in the UK, the Global Pandemic, and the Nexus between Marketized Higher Education and Border Controls