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Academic domains as political battlegrounds : a global enquiry by 99 academics in the fields of education and technology

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dc.contributor.author Al Lily, Abdulrahman Essa A., 1983-
dc.contributor.author Gumbo, Mishack Thiza
dc.date.accessioned 2021-10-15T06:57:12Z
dc.date.available 2021-10-15T06:57:12Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.identifier.citation Al Lily A.E. Academic domains as political battlegrounds: A global enquiry by 99 academics in the fields of education and technology, In: Information Development Vol 33, No 3. July 2016 en
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10500/28178
dc.identifier.uri https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0266666916646415
dc.description This is a multiple authored article en
dc.description.abstract This article theorizes the functional relationship between the human components (i.e., scholars) and nonhuman 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 mutual (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. Information Development. doi: 10.1177/0266666915622044. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (19 pages) : illustrations, map en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Sage en
dc.rights © The Author(s) 2016 en
dc.subject Education en
dc.subject Academia en
dc.subject Organizational politics en
dc.subject Academic domain en
dc.subject Crowd-authoring en
dc.subject Technology en
dc.subject Power en
dc.subject.ddc 507.11
dc.subject.lcsh Science -- Study and teaching (Higher) en
dc.subject.lcsh Technology -- Study and teaching (Higher) en
dc.subject.lcsh Education, Higher -- Political aspects -- Case studies en
dc.title Academic domains as political battlegrounds : a global enquiry by 99 academics in the fields of education and technology en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Science and Technology Education en


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