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The external pressures on the internal governance of universities

The external pressures on the internal governance of universities
The external pressures on the internal governance of universities
Governance is a means for realising institutional goals and in an ideal world should enable the institution to respond to the demands of the political environment by regulating its internal affairs accordingly. In the case of universities, not only is that environment increasingly differentiated but so also is the ability of universities to access it. Changes in state funding arrangements, accountability mechanisms, the contribution of the private sector, and the public definition of university education have placed numerous and varied pressures on institutions. Yet there is a studied reluctance by institutions to accept that their ability to respond to these pressures is equally variable, that they should tailor their ambitions to their capacities, and that their internal governance should be adapted using the principle of fitness for purpose. In the main, this is because the dominant ideological themes of higher education do not support the idea of distinct university functions of equal status. Rather, they encourage the erroneous belief that all universities are homogeneous in their functions - or, at least, that all have the potential to be homogeneous.
governance, universities
0951-5224
245-256
Salter, Brian
db1536c6-ec50-490c-a59d-d664f1b15599
Tapper, Ted
21b71ec2-daeb-4338-b8aa-4b798b3a8987
Salter, Brian
db1536c6-ec50-490c-a59d-d664f1b15599
Tapper, Ted
21b71ec2-daeb-4338-b8aa-4b798b3a8987

Salter, Brian and Tapper, Ted (2002) The external pressures on the internal governance of universities. Higher Education Quarterly, 56 (3), 245-256. (doi:10.1111/1468-2273.00216).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Governance is a means for realising institutional goals and in an ideal world should enable the institution to respond to the demands of the political environment by regulating its internal affairs accordingly. In the case of universities, not only is that environment increasingly differentiated but so also is the ability of universities to access it. Changes in state funding arrangements, accountability mechanisms, the contribution of the private sector, and the public definition of university education have placed numerous and varied pressures on institutions. Yet there is a studied reluctance by institutions to accept that their ability to respond to these pressures is equally variable, that they should tailor their ambitions to their capacities, and that their internal governance should be adapted using the principle of fitness for purpose. In the main, this is because the dominant ideological themes of higher education do not support the idea of distinct university functions of equal status. Rather, they encourage the erroneous belief that all universities are homogeneous in their functions - or, at least, that all have the potential to be homogeneous.

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More information

Published date: July 2002
Keywords: governance, universities
Organisations: Lifelong & Work-Related Learning

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 45922
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/45922
ISSN: 0951-5224
PURE UUID: 20b48b1c-5f29-409f-8a9a-1553d788122b

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Apr 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:14

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Contributors

Author: Brian Salter
Author: Ted Tapper

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