Higher education professionals in the age of NPM and digital knowledge: distinction strategies for forming new occupational capital

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Abstract

The present study examines how changes in higher education systems — caused mostly by neoliberal ideologies and the knowledge revolution — affect non-faculty professionals such as academic librarians, and how they cope with these changes. Specifically, relying on Bourdieu’s theory of distinction, we show how Israeli academic librarians adopt three types of distinctions — cultural, aesthetic, and professional — and construct occupational capital that bestows on them power and renewed legitimacy in the face of threats to their professional identity and to their role in academic studies. The study in based on interviews with librarians working in the leading universities in Israel, and it examines the librarians’ experiences and attempts to adjust their professional identities to the emergence of neoliberal ‘new public management’ (NPM) culture within academia.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)146-158
Number of pages13
JournalStudies in Higher Education
Volume47
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Jan 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Society for Research into Higher Education.

Keywords

  • Bourdieu
  • NPM in higher education
  • academic librarians
  • digitation in universities
  • occupational capital

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