They Make a Desert and Call it Peace

Our paper seeks to begin a conversation about how legal academics might work collaboratively to resist neoliberal reforms in legal education. We begin by considering the existing literature about how academics have responded to recent efforts to corporatize university education. This literature reve...

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Main Author: Frank Carrigan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bond University 2013-01-01
Series:Legal Education Review
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6281
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author Frank Carrigan
author_facet Frank Carrigan
author_sort Frank Carrigan
collection DOAJ
description Our paper seeks to begin a conversation about how legal academics might work collaboratively to resist neoliberal reforms in legal education. We begin by considering the existing literature about how academics have responded to recent efforts to corporatize university education. This literature reveals a great level of despondency and despair. Most acts of resistance are either individual or passive. Following this, we put forward as alternative conceptualisation of the academic – the academic activist. We consider whether this conceptualisation might offer a place from which resistance can emerge. Finally, we consider strategies that might be adopted by legal academics who wish to contest neoliberalism within the law school and the university. Given the evidence of academic despair and disempowerment, we propose a range of strategies which are both active and passive and range from the individual to the collaborative.
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spelling doaj-art-1ba605e943644bca89168e7dee98b7eb2025-08-20T03:47:19ZengBond UniversityLegal Education Review1033-28391839-37132013-01-0123210.53300/001c.6281They Make a Desert and Call it PeaceFrank CarriganOur paper seeks to begin a conversation about how legal academics might work collaboratively to resist neoliberal reforms in legal education. We begin by considering the existing literature about how academics have responded to recent efforts to corporatize university education. This literature reveals a great level of despondency and despair. Most acts of resistance are either individual or passive. Following this, we put forward as alternative conceptualisation of the academic – the academic activist. We consider whether this conceptualisation might offer a place from which resistance can emerge. Finally, we consider strategies that might be adopted by legal academics who wish to contest neoliberalism within the law school and the university. Given the evidence of academic despair and disempowerment, we propose a range of strategies which are both active and passive and range from the individual to the collaborative.https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6281
spellingShingle Frank Carrigan
They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
Legal Education Review
title They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
title_full They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
title_fullStr They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
title_full_unstemmed They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
title_short They Make a Desert and Call it Peace
title_sort they make a desert and call it peace
url https://doi.org/10.53300/001c.6281
work_keys_str_mv AT frankcarrigan theymakeadesertandcallitpeace