CHENG, Ming and ALBIA, Joclarisse (2024). Academic citizenship beyond the service role: Views of academics in England and the Philippines. Studies in Higher Education. [Article]
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Final accepted_11 2024.pdf - Accepted Version
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Final accepted_11 2024.pdf - Accepted Version
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Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
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Abstract
The evolving nature of academic work in higher education invites a deep
questioning of the conventional view of academic citizenship as the service role.
Drawing insights from a multi-site case study of academics in England and the
Philippines and taking a social psychological approach to citizenship, the paper
reveals that for academics who work in highly performative contexts, academic
citizenship means more than a ‘service’ role. It is perceived as a notion that
integrates their activities, ideals and values as well as the ways they approach
their work – how they see themselves as being academic citizens. Academic
citizenship goes beyond the undertaking of activities with moral, altruistic and
civic merits. This paper proposes the view of academic citizenship as a practice
of enactment not simply a function of membership status. It encompasses the
processes and means by which academics use freedoms and autonomy at their
disposal, and the value they see as central to their membership in their academic
communities.
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