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A Discussion of Suzanne Mettler’s Degrees of Inequality: How the Politics of Higher Education Sabotaged the American Dream

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2016

Abstract

The discipline of political science in the United States evolved in tandem with the development of democratic education and the modern university system. Since the early years of the twentieth century, political science has been an academic discipline housed in universities and colleges, and most political scientists earn their living as university or college teachers. And yet as individual academics or as a discipline, we rarely stand back from our institutional environment and ask hard questions about what is happening with higher education and what this means for the practice of political science. Suzanne Mettler does precisely this in Degrees of Inequality: How Higher Education Politics Sabotaged the American Dream. And so we have invited a range of political science scholars, many with extensive experience as university leaders, to comment on her book and its implications for the future of political science.

Type
Review Symposium: Higher Education and the American Dream
Copyright
Copyright © American Political Science Association 2016 

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References

Coles, Romand. 2014. “Transforming the Game: Democratizing the Publicness of Higher Education and Commonwealth in Neoliberal Times.” New Political Science 36(4): 622–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coles, Romand and Scarnati, Blasé. 2015. “Transformational Ecotones: The Craftsperson Ethos and Higher Education.” in Democracy’s Education: Public Work, Citizenship, and the Future of Colleges and Universities, ed. Boyte, Harry. Nashville, TN: Vanderbilt University Press.Google Scholar