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Academic domains as political battlegrounds: A global enquiry by 99 academics in the fields of education and technology.
University of Borås, Faculty of Librarianship, Information, Education and IT.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-4178-4609
Number of Authors: 982017 (English)In: Information Development, ISSN 0266-6669, Vol. 33, no 3, p. 270-288Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Abstract This article theorizes the functional relationship between the human components (i.e., scholars) and non- human components (i.e., structural configurations) of academic domains. It is organized around the following question: in what ways have scholars formed and been formed by the structural configurations of their academic domain? The article uses as a case study the academic domain of education and technology to examine this question. Its authorship approach is innovative, with a worldwide collection of academics (99 authors) collaborating to address the proposed question based on their reflections on daily social and academic practices. This collaboration followed a three-round process of contributions via email. Analysis of these scholars’ reflective accounts was carried out, and a theoretical proposition was established from this analysis. The proposition is of a mu tual (yet not necessarily balanced) power (and therefore political) relationship between the human and non-human constituents of an academic realm, with the two shaping one another. One implication of this proposition is that these non-human elements exist as political ‘actors’, just like their human counterparts, having ‘agency’ – which they exercise over humans. This turns academic domains into political (functional or dysfunctional) ‘battlefields’ wherein both humans and non-humans engage in political activities and actions that form the identity of the academic domain. For more information about the authorship approach, please see Al Lily AEA (2015) A crowd-authoring project on the scholarship of educational technology .

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2017. Vol. 33, no 3, p. 270-288
Keywords [en]
Education, Technology, Academia, organizational politics, academic domain, crowd-authoring
National Category
Pedagogy
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hb:diva-27555DOI: 10.1177/0266666916646415ISI: 000401148100005Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85019498734OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hb-27555DiVA, id: diva2:1645410
Available from: 2022-03-17 Created: 2022-03-17 Last updated: 2022-09-28Bibliographically approved

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Player-Koro, Catarina

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