ABSTRACT

Academic ethics are currently much in the news but there is a great deal of uncertainty, both as to what constitutes specifically academic ethics and about a number of issues that are taken to be issues of academic ethics. This collection of papers focuses on both questions, moving from consideration of the very idea of a University and what that entails, via attempts to locate the major current concerns, to particular issues relating to the University's relations with the corporate world, the professor's role, relations between student and teacher, credentialling, the demands of collegiality and plagiarism. The editors have provided both a full and reasoned introduction and a critical end-piece that attempt to bring some order to the often inchoate nature of this field, raising the further question of whether institutions should, or should not, frame formal codes of conduct. The selected papers are drawn from diverse sources and together provide one of the first comprehensive overviews of academic ethics.

part I|62 pages

The Idea of a University

part II|102 pages

Contemporary Concerns

chapter 6|40 pages

On Academic Delinquency

chapter 7|26 pages

The Prospects for the University

chapter 8|13 pages

Academic Corruption *

chapter 10|6 pages

Dishonesty in the Academy

part III|46 pages

The University and Business

chapter 13|3 pages

This Little Student Went to Market

When colleges sell themselves to applicants—and vice versa—fairness falls by the wayside.

chapter 14|6 pages

The True Scholar

In the Age of Money, self-interest dominates the academy. But it may not explain how the world works. Perhaps it's time to reconnect scholarship to morality.

chapter 15|14 pages

THE Kept UNIVERSITY

part IV|94 pages

The Professor

chapter 17|14 pages

Power, Pretense, and Piggybacking

Some Ethical Issues in Teaching

chapter 18|14 pages

Ethics in the Academic Profession

A Socratic View

chapter 19|8 pages

A Profile of the Ethical Professor

Student Views

chapter 20|17 pages

My Profession and Its Duties

chapter 21|11 pages

Professorial Ethics

part V|68 pages

Administration

chapter 24|5 pages

Professional Values and the Allure of the Market

When college presidents become CEO s, professors act as free agents, and students turn into consumers, will the traditional values of higher education survive?

chapter 26|10 pages

Brave New University

chapter 28|28 pages

Is Peer Review Overrated?

part VI|97 pages

Professors and Students

chapter 32|23 pages

Faculty Conduct

An Empirical Study of Ethical Activism

chapter 33|9 pages

The Higher Yearning

Bringing eros back to academe

part VII|29 pages

Collegiality

chapter 36|4 pages

The Bitter Groves of Academe

chapter 37|4 pages

On Collegiality, College Style

chapter 38|7 pages

The Way We Live Now

part IX|48 pages

A Code of Ethics

chapter 43|17 pages

Academic Dishonesty

Honor Codes and Other Contextual Influences

part X|17 pages

Credentialling

chapter 46|12 pages

Credentialing vs. Educating

chapter 47|3 pages

A Question of Degrees

part XI|16 pages

Academic Ethics: Towards a Coherent Concept