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KNOWLEDGE INSTITUTIONS GENDER : an east-west comparative study MODES OF ORDERING AND BOUNDARIES WHICH MATTER IN ACADEMIC KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION Ulrike Felt, Tereza Stöckelová With contribution of Lisa Garforth, Magdalena Gorska, Luba Koba, Morgan Meyer, Seppo Poutanen, Mariana Szapuova, Veronika Wöhrer
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Orders, audits, classifications, boundaries The image of seamless, universal science vs. boundaries within science Proliferation of policy ordering of academia Power, Micheal. 1997. The Audit Society: Rituals of Verification. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Strathern, Marylin (ed.). 2000. Audit cultures: Anthropological studies in accountability, ethics and the academy. London and NY: Routledge. “A key characteristic of neoliberal governance is that it relies on more indirect forms of intervention and control. In particular, it seeks to act on and through the agency, interests, desires and motivations of individuals, encouraging them to see themselves as active subjects responsible for improving their own conduct. By internalizing the external norms of management, ‘flexibilized workers’ transform themselves into governable subjects of managerial power and control.“ Shore, Cris. 2008. “Audit culture and illiberal governance: Universities and the politics of accountability.” Anthropological Theory, 8(3): 278–298.
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Multiplicity of orderings Law, John. 1994. Organizing modernity. Oxford: Blackwell. Vocation, Vision, Administration, Enterprise Boundaries in flux Drawing, undrawing and redrawing boundaries
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Mo de s of orderings and boundaries which matter the scientific & the social Labelling research Institutional boudaries Geographies of reference Disciplines as cognitive topographies Europe & nation states Centres/ periphery & East/West Excellence & its others Basic/applied research Situating & being situated
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The excellent and the others As an boundary object travelling across the EU Universal indicators favouring natural sciences’ epistemic practices and patterns Researchers’ attitudes –internalization of the audit framework by most bioscientists –critical voices in biosciences: appeal to alternative mode, to „good science“ (cooperation, students, freedom) –moderate critique in social science (modified assessment) Funding scheme for excellent „risky“ research to mitigate perverted effects of audit culture
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