Austerity Blues: Fighting for the Soul of Public Higher Education
This event has already happened.
Saturday, July 8th 2017
7:30 pm
Red Emma's
Public higher education in the postwar era was a key economic and
social driver in American life, making college available to millions of
working men and women. Since the 1980s, however, government austerity
policies and politics have severely reduced public investment in higher
education, exacerbating inequality among poor and working-class students
of color, as well as part-time faculty. In Austerity Blues,
Michael Fabricant and Stephen Brier examine these devastating fiscal
retrenchments nationally, focusing closely on New York and California,
both of which were leaders in the historic expansion of public higher
education in the postwar years and now are at the forefront of austerity
measures. Fabricant and Brier describe the extraordinary growth
of public higher education after 1945, thanks largely to state
investment, the alternative intellectual and political traditions that
defined the 1960s, and the social and economic forces that produced
austerity policies and inequality beginning in the late 1970s and 1980s.
A provocative indictment of the negative impact neoliberal policies
have visited on the public university, especially the growth of class,
racial, and gender inequalities, Austerity Blues also analyzes
the many changes currently sweeping public higher education, including
the growing use of educational technology, online learning, and
privatization, while exploring how these developments hurt students and
teachers. In its final section, the book offers examples of oppositional
and emancipatory struggles and practices that can help reimagine public
higher education in the future.
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