Archives for 2016

Academy of Social Sciences Names 84 New Fellows
Impact
October 18, 2016

Academy of Social Sciences Names 84 New Fellows

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Jean-Marc Mangin Steps Down as Head of Canada’s HSS Umbrella Federation
Recent Appointments
October 14, 2016

Jean-Marc Mangin Steps Down as Head of Canada’s HSS Umbrella Federation

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What’s ‘World Class’ About University Rankings?
Higher Education Reform
October 13, 2016

What’s ‘World Class’ About University Rankings?

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In Australia, Academic Contracts Threaten Freed Speech
International Debate
October 13, 2016

In Australia, Academic Contracts Threaten Freed Speech

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The Never-Ending Audit®: Questioning the Lecturer Experience

The Never-Ending Audit®: Questioning the Lecturer Experience

The never-ending audit makes a crucial point about the ways in which power structures have shifted within universities, argues our Daniel Nehring. In effect, it suggests the death of the ideal of the autonomous scholar-researcher-teacher.

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Why Did Contract Theory Deserve a Nobel Prize?

Why Did Contract Theory Deserve a Nobel Prize?

As technology improves and organizations become more complex, the theory and practice of contract design will only increase in importance. As such, we owe, we owe a great debt to this year’s Nobel laureates in economics for giving us powerful tools to structure effective contracts.

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CASBS, SAGE Seek to Honor Academics or Researchers With Policy Successes

CASBS, SAGE Seek to Honor Academics or Researchers With Policy Successes

“Research conducted in the social and behavioral sciences has the unique capacity to improve the human condition in a way that other sciences cannot. Social and behavioral scientists deserve to be recognized for the important impact of their work.” The SAGE-CASBS Award is an effort to do so.

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Archived Webinar: Librarians and the Freedom to Read

Archived Webinar: Librarians and the Freedom to Read

Last month the webinar “Battling Bannings- Authors discuss intellectual freedom and the freedom to read” saw Index on Censorship’s Vicky Baker moderate a discussion between historian Wendy Doniger and children’s book authors Christine Baldacchino and Jessica Herthel.

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Take Away Tenure, and Professors Become Sheep

Take Away Tenure, and Professors Become Sheep

Alice Dreger says shecan see clearly that universities in which the majority of the faculty feel unsafe in terms of job security become places where no one feels safe to do anything that might risk upsetting someone.

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Liberal Academe May Be ‘Open’ But Is It Tolerant?

Liberal Academe May Be ‘Open’ But Is It Tolerant?

If we value contrary opinion on campus, say social psychologist Mark Brandt, it’s important to ask: Where are the conservatives?

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Archived Webinar: A Debate on Academic Freedom

Archived Webinar: A Debate on Academic Freedom

On September 27, as part of Social Science Space’s series on academic freedom, three of the contributors to that series – Daniel Nehring, Dylan Kerrigan, and Joanna Williams – participated in an hour-long webinar to discuss some of the issues at the heart of this issue.

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The Financialisation of Academic Knowledge Production

The Financialisation of Academic Knowledge Production

As part of our series on academic freedom, Dylan Kerrigan discusses the wider implications of the financialisation of academic knowledge production by considering academic book publishing. He asks if the success of academic books is best measured by economic or non-economic criteria, by its impact on the business sector or its veracity, by ideological myth-making or evidence.

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