社会科学、艺术和人文学科研究生的私人资助伦理

IF 0.6 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Sharon Stein, V. Andreotti, R. Boxall
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The discussions in this paper are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of their research activities in a changing funding environment. Readers are free to copy, display, and distribute this article, as long as the work is attributed to the author(s) and Critical Education, it is distributed for non-commercial purposes only, and no alteration or transformation is made in the work. More details of this Creative Commons license are available from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/. All other uses must be approved by the author(s) or Critical Education. Critical Education is published by the Institute for Critical Educational Studies and housed at the University of British Columbia. Articles are indexed by EBSCO Education Research Complete and Directory of Open Access Journal. C r i t i c a l E d u c a t i o n 2 Compared to students and scholars working in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines, researchers in social science, arts, and humanities (SSAH) disciplines tend to have fewer and shallower sources of both internal and external funding. In particular, the contemporary context of global trends toward the increased privatization and marketization of higher education puts SSAH research at a considerable competitive disadvantage for funding, which affects not only faculty but also graduate students. In this context, public institutions are increasingly seeking private sources of funding for students. Yet there is a notable lack of literature about non-public sector funding for graduate studies in SSAH. Further, although concerns about private funding are increasingly widespread, many people lack a sense of how to actually address these concerns in their own contexts. Rather than argue “for or against” private funding, this article discusses both the opportunities and risks involved in the pursuit of private funding for SSAH fields in public universities, both in general and specifically as it relates to graduate student funding. In doing so, it offers scaffolding for further, contextspecific conversations about private funding for those working in higher education. In an effort to consider the ethical and practical dimensions of any decision to seek private funding for graduate students, this article addresses how these issues were presented in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada and their decision to pursue private external funding for graduate students. Although education is an interdisciplinary field, education scholars tend to work within SSAH traditions. As such, although this article emerged out of the particular context of a public university in western Canada, it is situated within broader discussions about the ethics and impacts of private research funding and accountability on higher education. In this article we explore the complexities and shades of grey that shape the landscape of institutional and faculty decisions about higher education research funding, foregrounding the ethical questions that arise. These discussions are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of SSAH research activities in a changing funding environment. We begin by discussing the wider landscape of privatization in higher education over the past several decades, and then consider how this landscape affects SSAH research funding in particular. We then address how ethical concerns around private funding have been addressed in other contexts, before turning to the example of the UBC Faculty of Education. Beyond the general need to ensure the ethical integrity of research, and to protect both critical research and research that is generally considered less “fundable”, we suggest that rather than a universal set of best practices, of primary importance when addressing the ethics of private funding is the local context, including institutional needs and faculty concerns. Thus, we offer a series of guiding considerations and accompanying discussion questions for faculty and administrators who are engaged in developing policies and procedures around private funding. Finally, we conclude the article by proposing a summary of possible frameworks that could be used to develop a policy and practice for private funding and donations for graduate students. Trends Toward Privatization Over the past thirty years, funding from non-governmental/private organizations for higher education (e.g. sponsored research, building projects, endowed chairs) has significantly increased. This has been framed as part of a larger global shift toward the privatization of higher education and declining public funding (Ball, 2010, 2012; Bok, 2003), and movement toward a more entrepreneurial university (Etzkowitz & Zhou, 2008). This, in turn, has been described as a E t h i c s o f P r i v a t e F u n d i n g f o r G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t s 3 significant shift away from the public good orientation of higher education in the post-World War II era (Marginson, 2018; Newfield, 2016; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004). Indeed, according to Slaughter and Rhoades (2004), there has been a shift from a “public good knowledge/learning regime” toward an “academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime,” although they argue that the two regimes continue to coexist (p. 28). In the public good knowledge/learning regime, emphasis is on universities’ indirect contributions to capital accumulation, as well as the generation of knowledge with use-values that are not even indirectly commodifiable. Within the currently dominant academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime, there is instead an emphasis on producing knowledge with immediate exchange-value. Although this paper does not examine or unpack in depth the underlying social, political, and economic reasons behind this shift, such an analysis should be part of any larger conversation about trends in higher education funding. As Marginson (2018) notes, within Anglo-American contexts, “The public dimension [of higher education] is defined narrowly in terms of a market economy in which individual benefits are paramount. Thus the master public role of HEIs is seen as their contribution to profitability, industry innovation, and economic growth” (p. 324). In other words, not only have we seen a shift in emphasis toward private as opposed to public benefits of higher education, but even public benefits are increasingly redefined as those that contribute to economic growth, with the dubious assumption that this will be a shared benefit. This means that the benefits of research and fields of study that are deemed to have no direct exchange-value on the market are devalued, such as those that are oriented to “create and distribute knowledge and ideas, and advance free expression; foster scientific literacy, and sustain intellectual conversations and artistic work; contribute to policy and government, and prepare citizens for democratic decision-making” (Marginson, 2018, p. 322). Within contemporary funding regimes wherein academics are increasingly encouraged to pursue private funding, fields considered to be “distant from the ‘market’” (Rhoades & Slaughter, 1997, p. 11) are at a serious disadvantage, not only because they are ideologically devalued but also because they tend to have fewer and shallower funding sources than more ‘market-adjacent’ fields. In particular, private research funding has primarily been oriented toward STEM fields, thereby disadvantaging SSAH fields in the new landscape of resource competition. This both reflects and deepens existing inequalities in public funding for different fields. For instance, in Canada in 2017-2018, the federal budget for the Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) was $547 million CAD, compared to $848 million CAD for the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and $773 million CAD for the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) (Kondro, 2017). University collaboration and resource seeking from private sources, including industry, non-profit organizations, and philanthropic foundations, is hardly a new phenomenon (Lowen, 1997). However, recent growth has been driven by intensified government pressure for universities to contribute more directly to local and national economic growth, and institutional pressure for individual academics and departments to diversify their funding sources, particularly through the pursuit of external research funding (Ankrah & Al-Tabbaa, 2015; Metcalfe, 2010; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004; Wichmann-Hansen & Herrman, 2017). The policy priorities and research strategy of universities and faculties, therefore, involve balancing academic autonomy and integrity with societal relevance, while maintaining access to different sources of funding. It has been noted that private funders are going far beyond providing one-off grants or donations to institutions, being also increasingly involved in advocacy, policy-making, reform efforts and having influence over how the mission of higher education is perceived (Baker, 2017; Hall & Thomas","PeriodicalId":10808,"journal":{"name":"Critical Education","volume":"14 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2019-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Ethics of Private Funding for Graduate Students in the Social Sciences, Arts, and Humanities\",\"authors\":\"Sharon Stein, V. Andreotti, R. 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The discussions in this paper are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of their research activities in a changing funding environment. Readers are free to copy, display, and distribute this article, as long as the work is attributed to the author(s) and Critical Education, it is distributed for non-commercial purposes only, and no alteration or transformation is made in the work. More details of this Creative Commons license are available from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/. All other uses must be approved by the author(s) or Critical Education. Critical Education is published by the Institute for Critical Educational Studies and housed at the University of British Columbia. Articles are indexed by EBSCO Education Research Complete and Directory of Open Access Journal. C r i t i c a l E d u c a t i o n 2 Compared to students and scholars working in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines, researchers in social science, arts, and humanities (SSAH) disciplines tend to have fewer and shallower sources of both internal and external funding. In particular, the contemporary context of global trends toward the increased privatization and marketization of higher education puts SSAH research at a considerable competitive disadvantage for funding, which affects not only faculty but also graduate students. In this context, public institutions are increasingly seeking private sources of funding for students. Yet there is a notable lack of literature about non-public sector funding for graduate studies in SSAH. Further, although concerns about private funding are increasingly widespread, many people lack a sense of how to actually address these concerns in their own contexts. Rather than argue “for or against” private funding, this article discusses both the opportunities and risks involved in the pursuit of private funding for SSAH fields in public universities, both in general and specifically as it relates to graduate student funding. In doing so, it offers scaffolding for further, contextspecific conversations about private funding for those working in higher education. In an effort to consider the ethical and practical dimensions of any decision to seek private funding for graduate students, this article addresses how these issues were presented in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada and their decision to pursue private external funding for graduate students. Although education is an interdisciplinary field, education scholars tend to work within SSAH traditions. As such, although this article emerged out of the particular context of a public university in western Canada, it is situated within broader discussions about the ethics and impacts of private research funding and accountability on higher education. In this article we explore the complexities and shades of grey that shape the landscape of institutional and faculty decisions about higher education research funding, foregrounding the ethical questions that arise. These discussions are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of SSAH research activities in a changing funding environment. We begin by discussing the wider landscape of privatization in higher education over the past several decades, and then consider how this landscape affects SSAH research funding in particular. We then address how ethical concerns around private funding have been addressed in other contexts, before turning to the example of the UBC Faculty of Education. Beyond the general need to ensure the ethical integrity of research, and to protect both critical research and research that is generally considered less “fundable”, we suggest that rather than a universal set of best practices, of primary importance when addressing the ethics of private funding is the local context, including institutional needs and faculty concerns. Thus, we offer a series of guiding considerations and accompanying discussion questions for faculty and administrators who are engaged in developing policies and procedures around private funding. Finally, we conclude the article by proposing a summary of possible frameworks that could be used to develop a policy and practice for private funding and donations for graduate students. Trends Toward Privatization Over the past thirty years, funding from non-governmental/private organizations for higher education (e.g. sponsored research, building projects, endowed chairs) has significantly increased. This has been framed as part of a larger global shift toward the privatization of higher education and declining public funding (Ball, 2010, 2012; Bok, 2003), and movement toward a more entrepreneurial university (Etzkowitz & Zhou, 2008). This, in turn, has been described as a E t h i c s o f P r i v a t e F u n d i n g f o r G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t s 3 significant shift away from the public good orientation of higher education in the post-World War II era (Marginson, 2018; Newfield, 2016; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004). Indeed, according to Slaughter and Rhoades (2004), there has been a shift from a “public good knowledge/learning regime” toward an “academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime,” although they argue that the two regimes continue to coexist (p. 28). In the public good knowledge/learning regime, emphasis is on universities’ indirect contributions to capital accumulation, as well as the generation of knowledge with use-values that are not even indirectly commodifiable. Within the currently dominant academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime, there is instead an emphasis on producing knowledge with immediate exchange-value. Although this paper does not examine or unpack in depth the underlying social, political, and economic reasons behind this shift, such an analysis should be part of any larger conversation about trends in higher education funding. As Marginson (2018) notes, within Anglo-American contexts, “The public dimension [of higher education] is defined narrowly in terms of a market economy in which individual benefits are paramount. Thus the master public role of HEIs is seen as their contribution to profitability, industry innovation, and economic growth” (p. 324). In other words, not only have we seen a shift in emphasis toward private as opposed to public benefits of higher education, but even public benefits are increasingly redefined as those that contribute to economic growth, with the dubious assumption that this will be a shared benefit. This means that the benefits of research and fields of study that are deemed to have no direct exchange-value on the market are devalued, such as those that are oriented to “create and distribute knowledge and ideas, and advance free expression; foster scientific literacy, and sustain intellectual conversations and artistic work; contribute to policy and government, and prepare citizens for democratic decision-making” (Marginson, 2018, p. 322). Within contemporary funding regimes wherein academics are increasingly encouraged to pursue private funding, fields considered to be “distant from the ‘market’” (Rhoades & Slaughter, 1997, p. 11) are at a serious disadvantage, not only because they are ideologically devalued but also because they tend to have fewer and shallower funding sources than more ‘market-adjacent’ fields. In particular, private research funding has primarily been oriented toward STEM fields, thereby disadvantaging SSAH fields in the new landscape of resource competition. This both reflects and deepens existing inequalities in public funding for different fields. For instance, in Canada in 2017-2018, the federal budget for the Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) was $547 million CAD, compared to $848 million CAD for the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and $773 million CAD for the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) (Kondro, 2017). University collaboration and resource seeking from private sources, including industry, non-profit organizations, and philanthropic foundations, is hardly a new phenomenon (Lowen, 1997). However, recent growth has been driven by intensified government pressure for universities to contribute more directly to local and national economic growth, and institutional pressure for individual academics and departments to diversify their funding sources, particularly through the pursuit of external research funding (Ankrah & Al-Tabbaa, 2015; Metcalfe, 2010; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004; Wichmann-Hansen & Herrman, 2017). The policy priorities and research strategy of universities and faculties, therefore, involve balancing academic autonomy and integrity with societal relevance, while maintaining access to different sources of funding. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

因此,我们为参与制定私人资金政策和程序的教师和管理人员提供了一系列指导性考虑和伴随的讨论问题。最后,我们总结了一些可能的框架,这些框架可用于为研究生制定私人资助和捐赠的政策和实践。在过去的三十年里,非政府/私人组织对高等教育的资助(例如赞助的研究、建筑项目、捐赠的椅子)大大增加。这被认为是全球向高等教育私有化和公共资金减少转变的一部分(Ball, 2010年,2012年;Bok, 2003),以及向更具创业精神的大学发展(Etzkowitz & Zhou, 2008)。反过来,这也被描述为一种“公共利益导向”的转变,这是第二次世界大战后高等教育从公共利益导向转向的第三次重大转变(Marginson, 2018;Newfield, 2016;Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004)。事实上,根据Slaughter和Rhoades(2004)的说法,已经从“公共利益知识/学习制度”向“学术资本主义知识/学习制度”转变,尽管他们认为这两种制度继续共存(第28页)。在公益知识/学习制度中,重点是大学对资本积累的间接贡献,以及产生具有使用价值的知识,这些知识甚至不能间接商品化。在目前占主导地位的学术资本主义知识/学习制度中,取而代之的是强调生产具有即时交换价值的知识。尽管本文没有深入研究或剖析这种转变背后潜在的社会、政治和经济原因,但这样的分析应该成为有关高等教育资金趋势的更大讨论的一部分。正如Marginson(2018)指出的那样,在英美背景下,“(高等教育)的公共维度是在个人利益至上的市场经济中狭义定义的。”因此,高等教育机构的主要公共角色被视为它们对盈利能力、行业创新和经济增长的贡献”(第324页)。换句话说,我们不仅看到了强调高等教育的私人利益而不是公共利益的转变,而且甚至公共利益也越来越多地被重新定义为有助于经济增长的利益,并假设这将是一种可疑的共享利益。这意味着那些被认为在市场上没有直接交换价值的研究和研究领域的利益被贬低了,比如那些以“创造和传播知识和思想,促进自由表达”为导向的研究和研究领域;培养科学素养,支持智力对话和艺术工作;为政策和政府做出贡献,并为公民的民主决策做好准备”(Marginson, 2018,第322页)。在当代的资助制度中,越来越多的学者被鼓励寻求私人资助,那些被认为“远离‘市场’”的领域(Rhoades & Slaughter, 1997,第11页)处于严重的劣势,不仅因为它们在意识形态上被贬低了,还因为它们往往比更“接近市场”的领域拥有更少、更浅的资金来源。特别是,私人研究资金主要面向STEM领域,因此在资源竞争的新格局中,SSAH领域处于不利地位。这既反映了不同领域公共资金的不平等,也加深了这种不平等。例如,在加拿大,2017-2018年,社会科学与人文研究委员会(SSHRC)的联邦预算为5.47亿加元,而自然科学与工程研究委员会(NSERC)的预算为8.48亿加元,加拿大卫生研究院(CIHR)的预算为7.73亿加元(Kondro, 2017)。大学合作和从私人来源(包括工业界、非营利组织和慈善基金会)寻求资源并不是一个新现象(Lowen, 1997)。然而,最近的增长是由政府加大压力,要求大学更直接地为地方和国家经济增长做出贡献,以及机构压力,要求个别学者和部门多样化其资金来源,特别是通过追求外部研究资金(Ankrah & Al-Tabbaa, 2015;梅特卡夫,2010;Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004;Wichmann-Hansen & Herrman, 2017)。因此,大学和学院的政策重点和研究策略涉及平衡学术自主和诚信与社会相关性,同时保持获得不同资金来源的机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Ethics of Private Funding for Graduate Students in the Social Sciences, Arts, and Humanities
This article offers a review of the strategic opportunities and ethical risks involved in the institutional pursuit of private funding for graduate students in the social sciences, arts, and humanities (SSAH) fields. There is little existing research about private funding for SSAH research, and this article seeks to address this gap. In addition to reviewing relevant literature about trends in the privatization of higher education, shifting funding priorities, and the ethics of private funding, we offer a set of guiding principles for developing a private funding policy in SSAH fields. We also illustrate relevant considerations and concerns using the example of a private funding policy for graduate student within a faculty of education in a public university in Canada. The discussions in this paper are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of their research activities in a changing funding environment. Readers are free to copy, display, and distribute this article, as long as the work is attributed to the author(s) and Critical Education, it is distributed for non-commercial purposes only, and no alteration or transformation is made in the work. More details of this Creative Commons license are available from http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/3.0/. All other uses must be approved by the author(s) or Critical Education. Critical Education is published by the Institute for Critical Educational Studies and housed at the University of British Columbia. Articles are indexed by EBSCO Education Research Complete and Directory of Open Access Journal. C r i t i c a l E d u c a t i o n 2 Compared to students and scholars working in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines, researchers in social science, arts, and humanities (SSAH) disciplines tend to have fewer and shallower sources of both internal and external funding. In particular, the contemporary context of global trends toward the increased privatization and marketization of higher education puts SSAH research at a considerable competitive disadvantage for funding, which affects not only faculty but also graduate students. In this context, public institutions are increasingly seeking private sources of funding for students. Yet there is a notable lack of literature about non-public sector funding for graduate studies in SSAH. Further, although concerns about private funding are increasingly widespread, many people lack a sense of how to actually address these concerns in their own contexts. Rather than argue “for or against” private funding, this article discusses both the opportunities and risks involved in the pursuit of private funding for SSAH fields in public universities, both in general and specifically as it relates to graduate student funding. In doing so, it offers scaffolding for further, contextspecific conversations about private funding for those working in higher education. In an effort to consider the ethical and practical dimensions of any decision to seek private funding for graduate students, this article addresses how these issues were presented in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Canada and their decision to pursue private external funding for graduate students. Although education is an interdisciplinary field, education scholars tend to work within SSAH traditions. As such, although this article emerged out of the particular context of a public university in western Canada, it is situated within broader discussions about the ethics and impacts of private research funding and accountability on higher education. In this article we explore the complexities and shades of grey that shape the landscape of institutional and faculty decisions about higher education research funding, foregrounding the ethical questions that arise. These discussions are relevant to public higher education institutions questioning how they can ensure the integrity and sustainability of SSAH research activities in a changing funding environment. We begin by discussing the wider landscape of privatization in higher education over the past several decades, and then consider how this landscape affects SSAH research funding in particular. We then address how ethical concerns around private funding have been addressed in other contexts, before turning to the example of the UBC Faculty of Education. Beyond the general need to ensure the ethical integrity of research, and to protect both critical research and research that is generally considered less “fundable”, we suggest that rather than a universal set of best practices, of primary importance when addressing the ethics of private funding is the local context, including institutional needs and faculty concerns. Thus, we offer a series of guiding considerations and accompanying discussion questions for faculty and administrators who are engaged in developing policies and procedures around private funding. Finally, we conclude the article by proposing a summary of possible frameworks that could be used to develop a policy and practice for private funding and donations for graduate students. Trends Toward Privatization Over the past thirty years, funding from non-governmental/private organizations for higher education (e.g. sponsored research, building projects, endowed chairs) has significantly increased. This has been framed as part of a larger global shift toward the privatization of higher education and declining public funding (Ball, 2010, 2012; Bok, 2003), and movement toward a more entrepreneurial university (Etzkowitz & Zhou, 2008). This, in turn, has been described as a E t h i c s o f P r i v a t e F u n d i n g f o r G r a d u a t e S t u d e n t s 3 significant shift away from the public good orientation of higher education in the post-World War II era (Marginson, 2018; Newfield, 2016; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004). Indeed, according to Slaughter and Rhoades (2004), there has been a shift from a “public good knowledge/learning regime” toward an “academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime,” although they argue that the two regimes continue to coexist (p. 28). In the public good knowledge/learning regime, emphasis is on universities’ indirect contributions to capital accumulation, as well as the generation of knowledge with use-values that are not even indirectly commodifiable. Within the currently dominant academic capitalist knowledge/learning regime, there is instead an emphasis on producing knowledge with immediate exchange-value. Although this paper does not examine or unpack in depth the underlying social, political, and economic reasons behind this shift, such an analysis should be part of any larger conversation about trends in higher education funding. As Marginson (2018) notes, within Anglo-American contexts, “The public dimension [of higher education] is defined narrowly in terms of a market economy in which individual benefits are paramount. Thus the master public role of HEIs is seen as their contribution to profitability, industry innovation, and economic growth” (p. 324). In other words, not only have we seen a shift in emphasis toward private as opposed to public benefits of higher education, but even public benefits are increasingly redefined as those that contribute to economic growth, with the dubious assumption that this will be a shared benefit. This means that the benefits of research and fields of study that are deemed to have no direct exchange-value on the market are devalued, such as those that are oriented to “create and distribute knowledge and ideas, and advance free expression; foster scientific literacy, and sustain intellectual conversations and artistic work; contribute to policy and government, and prepare citizens for democratic decision-making” (Marginson, 2018, p. 322). Within contemporary funding regimes wherein academics are increasingly encouraged to pursue private funding, fields considered to be “distant from the ‘market’” (Rhoades & Slaughter, 1997, p. 11) are at a serious disadvantage, not only because they are ideologically devalued but also because they tend to have fewer and shallower funding sources than more ‘market-adjacent’ fields. In particular, private research funding has primarily been oriented toward STEM fields, thereby disadvantaging SSAH fields in the new landscape of resource competition. This both reflects and deepens existing inequalities in public funding for different fields. For instance, in Canada in 2017-2018, the federal budget for the Social Science and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) was $547 million CAD, compared to $848 million CAD for the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and $773 million CAD for the Canadian Institutes for Health Research (CIHR) (Kondro, 2017). University collaboration and resource seeking from private sources, including industry, non-profit organizations, and philanthropic foundations, is hardly a new phenomenon (Lowen, 1997). However, recent growth has been driven by intensified government pressure for universities to contribute more directly to local and national economic growth, and institutional pressure for individual academics and departments to diversify their funding sources, particularly through the pursuit of external research funding (Ankrah & Al-Tabbaa, 2015; Metcalfe, 2010; Slaughter & Rhoades, 2004; Wichmann-Hansen & Herrman, 2017). The policy priorities and research strategy of universities and faculties, therefore, involve balancing academic autonomy and integrity with societal relevance, while maintaining access to different sources of funding. It has been noted that private funders are going far beyond providing one-off grants or donations to institutions, being also increasingly involved in advocacy, policy-making, reform efforts and having influence over how the mission of higher education is perceived (Baker, 2017; Hall & Thomas
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来源期刊
Critical Education
Critical Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.30
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30.00%
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