Abstract:
This thought‑provoking book addresses the persistent anxieties surrounding the purpose and direction of higher education, offering a nuanced historical perspective on its transformation. Using Cold War Britain as a lens, this book challenges the prevailing narrative that marketisation was an external imposition, revealing instead how the dynamic priorities of social democratic higher education inadvertently paved the way for their own supersession.
Drawing on novel archival insights, it explores experimental initiatives by university leaders and employers and reveals how post‑war public investment in universities was justified through a dual logic: empowering young people to pursue their individual self‑interest while cultivating the ethical application of specialist knowledge in service of liberal capitalism. It goes on to show how the novel accountability frameworks they constructed, intended to maximise freedom, contained unstable tensions – tensions that remain in today’s neoliberal system. Packed full of research, case studies, and policy implications, this book interrogates the successes and failures of innovative teaching and learning practices, as well as the evolving relationship between universities and industry. Throughout, the author offers critical insights into how liberal education might be reimagined to sustain universities in their service to the common good.
This is essential reading for students, academics, policymakers, and anyone seeking to understand the moral principles underpinning higher education and their influence on its future.
Bio:
Josh Patel completed his PhD in History at the University of Warwick in 2021 before holding a fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Teaching and Learning. He joined the Edge Foundation as a Researcher in 2022, focusing on tertiary education policy, skills, and historical perspectives on tertiary education. Alongside his research, Josh is a swimming coach and continues to regularly compete, and enjoys being active outdoors.