Reprint

Challenging Academia: A Critical Space for Controversial Social Issues

Edited by
August 2021
182 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-0826-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-0827-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Challenging Academia: A Critical Space for Controversial Social Issues that was published in

Business & Economics
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Some social issues and practices have become dangerous areas for academics to research and write about. ‘Academic freedom’ is increasingly constrained, not just by long established ‘normal’ factors (territoriality, power differentials, competition, protectionism), but also by the increased significance of social media and the rise of identity politics (and activists who treat work which challenges their world view as abusive hate-speech). So extreme are these pressures that some institutions and even statutory bodies now adopt policies and practices which contravene relevant regulations and laws. This book seeks to draw attention to the limiting and damaging effects of academic ‘gagging’.

 

The book, drawn from a special edition of Societies, offers an eclectic series of international articles which may annoy some people. The book challenges taken for granted mainstream assumptions and practices in a number of areas, including gender mainstreaming, social work education, child sexual abuse, the ethnic disaggregation of population groups, fatherhood and masculinity, the erosion of democratic legitimacy, the trap of victimhood and vulnerability, employment practices in universities, and the challenges presented by the widespread and deliberate suppression of scholarship and research. In an analytic postscript Laurent Dubreuil discusses the nature of identity politics and the manner in which its effects can be identified across the many topics covered in these challenging articles.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Early Childhood Education and Care; child sexual abuse; prevention policies; no touch; teacher–child relationships; male childcare workers; stigma; discrimination; fear; panopticon; moral panic; Brazilian academia; interviewing for faculty positions; Lattes CV; meritocracy; criminalisation; harm; law; criminal justice; freedom; risk; abuse; liberal; victim; vulnerability; critical thinking; identity politics; academic freedom; free speech; victimhood; anti-discriminatory practice; neoliberalism; shadow management; new public management; ombudsman; rule of law; transparency; higher education; body journal; Coronavirus; corporal identity; narratives; pandemic; parenthood; clan; academic taboo; Sweden; state; postcolonialism; research methods; disparity; disaggregating data; Asian Americans; disability; mental health; model minority myth; free speech; academic freedom; free inquiry; censorship; conformity; moral panics; witch hunts; heresy; gender mainstreaming; academic freedom; Lehrfreiheit; university autonomy; identity politics; Sweden; higher education; UNESCO