Is academic freedom feasible in the post-Soviet space of higher education?

被引:17
|
作者
Oleksiyenko, Anatoly V. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Fac Educ, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
Academic freedom; higher education; post-Soviet university; UNIVERSITIES; CHALLENGES; POLITICS; REFORM;
D O I
10.1080/00131857.2020.1773799
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The legacy of totalitarianism thwarts discourse and practice of academic freedom in post-Soviet universities. For legacy-holders, "academic freedom" causes disorientation, irresponsibility, demoralization and inequity. They see more threats than benefits from empowering decision-makers who are non-compliant with local bureaucracy. For innovators, freedoms enhance flexibility and creativity. However, granting such freedom also reinforces value clashes on campuses and tends to intensify feelings of guilt and shame in regard to actions which show a disrespect of authority and tradition. While both legacy-holders and innovators endeavour to redefine their practices and norms in their teaching, they appear to still struggle to shed their predispositions to a paternalistic and colonial philosophy of education. Presumably curative, their engagement with international networks of scholarship exposes their particular positions of vulnerabilities to that end. Both groups continue to push patriotism and cultural idiosyncrasy in order to hedge their power and status in the global marketplace of ideas. As in the past, a discourse of anti-westernization prevails, shoring up legacies of regulative thinking, indoctrination, and insularity. Progressive academics succeed primarily by taking bold steps to go above and beyond the dominant discourses and norms within their universities and policy-building communities. This article explicates why, in turn, a "surrogate academic freedom" tends to emerge as a conundrum across the post-Soviet higher education space.
引用
收藏
页码:1116 / 1126
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Advantages of the EAEU Integration on the Post-Soviet Space
    Sopilko, Natalya Yurievna
    Navrotskaia, Natalia Anatolyevna
    Myasnikova, Olga Yurievna
    EDUCATION EXCELLENCE AND INNOVATION MANAGEMENT: A 2025 VISION TO SUSTAIN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DURING GLOBAL CHALLENGES, 2020, : 1515 - 1526
  • [42] Blurring of collective identities in the post-Soviet space
    Ehala, Martin
    SOCIOLINGUISTIC STUDIES, 2015, 9 (2-3) : 173 - 190
  • [43] TRANSFORMATION OF THE ALIEN IMAGE IN THE POST-SOVIET SPACE
    Romanova, Anna
    Yakushenkov, Sergey
    Topchiev, Mike
    SGEM 2016, BK 3: ANTHROPOLOGY, ARCHAEOLOGY, HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, VOL II, 2016, : 949 - 954
  • [44] ECONOMIC INTEGRATION: LESSONS FOR THE POST-SOVIET SPACE
    Golovnin, Mikhail Yu
    Zakharov, Aleksandr V.
    Ushkalova, Dar'ya I.
    MIROVAYA EKONOMIKA I MEZHDUNARODNYE OTNOSHENIYA, 2016, 60 (04): : 61 - 69
  • [45] THE ADVENTURES OF OWEN HATHERLEY IN THE POST-SOVIET SPACE
    Kinstler, Linda
    TLS-THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, 2019, (6061): : 31 - 31
  • [46] The Fate of Federal Projects in the Post-Soviet Space
    Bolshakov, Andrey
    POLITEIA-JOURNAL OF POLITICAL THEORY POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY AND SOCIOLOGY OF POLITICS, 2007, 44 (01): : 112 - +
  • [47] Modernization in the Post-Soviet Space: The Social Dimension
    Sokolova, T. V.
    ZHURNAL NOVAYA EKONOMICHESKAYA ASSOTSIATSIYA-JOURNAL OF THE NEW ECONOMIC ASSOCIATION, 2011, (11): : 157 - 160
  • [48] POST-SOVIET SPACE: BACKGROUND AND THE RESULTS OF REGIONALIZATION
    Kaledin, Nikolai
    BALTIC REGION, 2009, (01) : 26 - 35
  • [49] The Space of the Ideological Discourse of Post-Soviet Buryatia
    Amogolonova, D. D.
    Skrynnikova, T. D.
    POLIS-POLITICHESKIYE ISSLEDOVANIYA, 2005, (02): : 53 - 63
  • [50] Ethnic Clan Politics in the Post-Soviet Space
    Sanglibaev, A. A.
    RUSSIAN POLITICS AND LAW, 2008, 46 (06): : 72 - 87