Volume 61, Issue 2 pp. 114-135

The Contemporary Professoriate: Towards a Diversified or Segmented Profession?

Nelly P. Stromquist

Nelly P. Stromquist

University of Southern California

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Manuel Gil-Antón

Manuel Gil-Antón

Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa

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Carol Colatrella

Carol Colatrella

Georgie Institute of Technology

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Reitumtse Obakeng Mabokela

Reitumtse Obakeng Mabokela

Michigan State University

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Anna Smolentseva

Anna Smolentseva

Moscow State University

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Elizabeth Balbachevsky

Elizabeth Balbachevsky

University of San Paulo

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First published: 20 March 2007
Citations: 18

Abstract

On the empirical basis of six national studies (Mexico, Brazil, Peru, Denmark, Russia and South Africa), this paper examines the phenomenon of segmentation, defined as the solidification of deep hierarchies with little crossover between categories of institutions or individuals. The massification of higher education has brought about a great diversity of institutions and, concomitantly, stark differences among the professoriate. While the public sector has to some extent been able to protect its academic personnel, the for-profit sector is moving towards an unstable professoriate, poorly paid, hired mostly on a per-hour basis, and for whom sharing in academic governance is a distant dream. Some of this differentiation is emerging also within institutions and a new kind of academic who could be termed ‘just-in-time knowledge worker’ is on the rise.

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