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The Law School, the Market and the New Knowledge Economy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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Until recently, Australia was firmly committed to the idea of higher education as a public good. The swing from social liberalism to neoliberalism has seen a rejection of this basic principle in favor of values associated with the market. Knowledge, education and credentialism have become highly desirable in the information age, but treating them as tradable commodities has profound repercussions for what is taught and how it is taught. Most significantly, we have moved to a mass education system where the focus is on applied and vocational knowledge. Within this new paradigm, law, business, information technology, hospitality and tourism courses have proliferated.

Type
Section 1: ‘Same Ol’, Same Ol'?' Reflecting on Curricular Reform
Copyright
Copyright © 2009 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 Usher, Robin, Imposing Structure, Enabling Play: New Knowledge Production and the “Real World” University in Working Knowledge: The New Vocationalism and Higher Education, 99 (Colin Symes and John McIntyre eds., 2000). The greater prestige of vocational courses is by no means new. Dunbabin states that this was also the case as far back as the 13th Century. See Jean Dunbabin, Universities c. 1150 - c. 1350 in The Idea of a University, 34 (David Smith and Anne Karin Langslow eds., 1999).Google Scholar

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4 I have adapted the typology of Simon Marginson and Mark Considine, The Enterprise University: Power, Governance and Reinvention in Australia (2000) 15–16. While they include five classifications: the ‘Sandstones', the ‘Redbricks', the ‘Gumtrees', the ‘Unitechs’ and the ‘New Universities', I have reduced this to four, as I felt that participants in the two Unitechs with law schools could be too easily identified. Also, the Unitech law schools are older than the News but the Unitechs did not become universities until the Dawkins reforms, so I have included them with the News. There is therefore some slippage between categories. Law schools were also introduced into some Redbrick and 3rd Generation institutions at the same time as the New Universities were established post-1988. Research was conducted in the following Australian law schools: Sandstones – Universities of Adelaide, Melbourne, Queensland, Sydney, Tasmania and Western Australia; Redbricks – ANU, Monash, New England, UNSW; 3rd Generation – James Cook, Deakin, Flinders, Griffith, Macquarie, Murdoch, Newcastle, Wollongong; News – Charles Darwin, QUT, Southern Cross, University of Canberra, UTS, UWS and Victoria University. Comparative research was also undertaken in the UK, Canada and New Zealand, which is not included in this article.Google Scholar

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