Rethinking academic citizenship for collective agency in times of crisis

Author:

Oleksiyenko Anatoly V.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Education and Human Development, Centre of Higher Education Leadership and Policy Studies The Education University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

Abstract

AbstractA crisis constitutes a catalyst for rethinking academic responsibilities in societies facing a major threat. When a crisis escalates, such rethinking moves to the centre of both academic and social discourses, resulting in scrutiny, as well as synergy of scholarship and citizenship. Delving into the existential threats faced by Ukrainian scholars during the genocidal campaign unleashed against their country by Russia in 2022, this paper re‐examines academic citizenship in times of war. The interviews analysed in this paper contribute to identifying synergies between scholarship and citizenship, and unpacking a collective agency shaped by crisis. Once peripheralized by neoliberal universities, academic citizenship is acquiring new meanings, while it reframes communal obligations and repositions professional duties in view of the life‐and‐death choices brought on by the war.

Funder

Research Grants Council, University Grants Committee

Publisher

Wiley

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