TY - CHAP
T1 - Academic Inbreeding
T2 - Local Challenge, Global Problem
AU - Altbach, Philip G.
AU - Yudkevich, Maria
AU - Rumbley, Laura E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2015, Philip G. Altbach, Maria Yudkevich, and Laura E. Rumbley.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Why examine “academic inbreeding,” a seemingly small and peripheral aspect of the academic profession, involving the appointment of faculty members who graduated from the institution employing them? Academic Inbreeding and Mobility in Higher Education: Global Perspectives had its origins in a concern at the National Research University — Higher School of Economics in Moscow that the common practice in Russia of hiring one’s own graduates for faculty jobs has profound implications for academic culture, productivity, and the essential nature of the university. This interest led to a research project collaboratively organized by the Higher School of Economics and the Boston College Center for International Higher Education and centered on an examination of academic inbreeding in eight different countries: Argentina, China, Japan, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, and Ukraine. We quickly discovered that faculty inbreeding is common worldwide — and not just a concern in Russia. Indeed, hiring one’s own graduates is not considered either unusual or problematic in many countries. The pattern has been in place for many years — often for centuries — and is quite often considered a point of pride for a higher education system, as clear evidence that the system is able to retain its best intellectual talent.
AB - Why examine “academic inbreeding,” a seemingly small and peripheral aspect of the academic profession, involving the appointment of faculty members who graduated from the institution employing them? Academic Inbreeding and Mobility in Higher Education: Global Perspectives had its origins in a concern at the National Research University — Higher School of Economics in Moscow that the common practice in Russia of hiring one’s own graduates for faculty jobs has profound implications for academic culture, productivity, and the essential nature of the university. This interest led to a research project collaboratively organized by the Higher School of Economics and the Boston College Center for International Higher Education and centered on an examination of academic inbreeding in eight different countries: Argentina, China, Japan, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, South Africa, and Ukraine. We quickly discovered that faculty inbreeding is common worldwide — and not just a concern in Russia. Indeed, hiring one’s own graduates is not considered either unusual or problematic in many countries. The pattern has been in place for many years — often for centuries — and is quite often considered a point of pride for a higher education system, as clear evidence that the system is able to retain its best intellectual talent.
KW - Global Problem
KW - High Education Sector
KW - High Education System
KW - Likert Scale Response
KW - Project Survey
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85086449535&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137461254_1
DO - https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137461254_1
M3 - Chapter
T3 - Palgrave Studies in Global Higher Education
SP - 1
EP - 16
BT - Palgrave Studies in Global Higher Education
ER -