Includes bibliographical references (pages 204-226) and index.
Chapter eight. The good university. The choice of futures -- Criteria for a good university ... -- ... and a good university system -- Manifestos and visions -- Taking action.
Chapter five. Privilege machines. The dark side of the university -- Making advantage happen -- Breaching the walls -- Machine limits.
Chapter four. The global economy of knowledge. Imperial science -- Making a world university system -- Making a worldwide workforce -- Multiple knowledge formations and Southern theory.
Chapter one. Making the knowledge: research. Being a researcher -- The work of research -- The knowledge formation -- Research and truth.
Chapter seven. Universities of hope. Histories of invention -- Contemporaries -- Struggle and joy: lessons of experience.
Chapter six. The university business. The maelstrom -- What enterprise universities sell -- The managers -- Telling lies about universities -- Maelstrom reconsidered.
Chapter three. The collective intellectual: university workers. Intellectuals -- Operations workers -- Academic workers -- Sustainability crisis.
Chapter two. Learning and teaching. The work of learning -- The course being run -- The work of teaching.
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Connell asks us to consider what a good university looks like, challenging us to rethink the fundamentals of what universities do. Drawing on the examples offered by pioneering universities and educational reformers around the world, the author outlines a practical vision for how our universities can become both more engaging and more productive places, driven by social good rather than profit, helping to build fairer societies.--From publisher description.
9781786995438
What universities actually do and why it's time for radical change