(非)可持续性的代理人:民主化大学以应对全球危机

Calum McGeown, J. Barry
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引用次数: 2

摘要

作为知识的生产者和守门人,作为教育和培训的提供者,我们的大学在不可持续性的再生产中发挥着关键作用。本文发现,就目前而言,他们是有组织的,因此在挫败和拖延应对地球危机的行动方面是同谋。然而,作为资源丰富和有影响力的机构,如果将它们的资源和活动重新导向进步的社会和生态目标,挑战而不是支持不可持续的现状,它们就具有内在的变革潜力。这意味着,作为这些机构内的工作人员,学者和研究人员面临着一个选择:是成为这种再生产的代理人,还是成为变革的倡导者和积极分子。我们支持后者。在这样做的过程中,我们寻求以无化石研究、未来学院和科学家叛乱等新兴运动的分析和要求为基础,让大学在倾听他们在地球紧急情况下产生的科学方面发挥领导作用,并采取相应的行动。采用绿色政治经济学的批判性分析,本文认为,如果他们要为社会转型做出贡献,大学本身必须进行转型,明确和系统地围绕社会和生态保护和优先事项重新调整学术实践。在这些发现的基础上,它围绕学术实践的三大支柱,为广泛的民主化计划提出了一系列规范和实用的论点:(1)研究,(2)教育和(3)推广和参与。然而,任何这样的过程当然都是困难的,特别是考虑到大学运作所处的更广泛的新自由主义政治和政治经济背景,以及保守的制度文化,这种文化不鼓励持不同意见的人“一切照旧”。因此,在接下来的讨论中,我们预计并认为,推动这种变革和创新的变化,首先将涉及愿意超越“学术界一如既往”的个人或一小群学者。
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Agents of (un)sustainability: democratising universities for the planetary crisis
As producers and gatekeepers of knowledge, and as providers of education and training, our universities play a key role in the reproduction of unsustainability. This article finds that they are, as currently organised, therefore complicit in frustrating and delaying action to address the planetary crisis. However, as highly resourced and influential institutions, they have an inherently transformative potential, should their resources and activities be redirected towards progressive social and ecological ends, which challenge rather than support the unsustainable status quo. This means that, as workers within these institutions, academics and researchers are faced with a choice: to be agents of this reproduction or to be advocates and activists for change. We argue for the latter. In doing so, we seek to build on the analysis and demands of emergent movements such as Fossil Free Research, Faculty for a Future and Scientist Rebellion in making the case for universities to show leadership on listening to the very science they produce on the planetary emergency, and act accordingly. Employing a green political economy critical analysis, the article suggests that, if they are to contribute to societal transformation, universities themselves must undergo transformations that explicitly and systematically reorient academic practices around social and ecological protection and priorities. Building on these findings, it lays out a series of normative and practical arguments for a broad programme of democratisation around three pillars of academic practise: (1) Research, (2) Education and (3) Outreach and engagement. However, any such processes will of course be difficult, especially given the wider neoliberal political and political economy context within which universities operate, as well as a conservative institutional culture which disincentivises dissent from “business as usual”. In the discussion that follows, we therefore anticipate and argue that advancing such transformative and innovative changes will initially involve individuals or small groups of academics willing to go beyond “academia as usual”.
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