Internal Event
Imagining a University for the Common Good Reading Group (Session 3)
October 20, 2025 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Online

A Critical Conversations Event
This reading group invites faculty to engage deeply with urgent questions about the purpose and future of higher education in times of intersecting global crises through critical engagement with the book Transforming Universities in the Midst of Global Crisis: A University for the Common Good (by Richard Hil, Kristen Lyons, and Fern Thompsett; available with Pratt login through the Pratt Libraries!).
Central themes we will consider include:
– How the foundational logics of colonialism continue to shape university structures, knowledge systems, and relationships today;
– Understanding climate change, COVID-19, and systemic inequities not as external threats but as revealing the “glitch” in current systems, opening space for reimagining;
– Moving from minor adjustments to radical transformation and exploring what it means to “hospice” failing systems while nurturing alternatives;
– Examining concrete examples of decolonizing, democratizing, and regenerative approaches already emerging in educational contexts.
Join us in exploring what a university truly committed to the common good might look like!
We will meet weekly on Mondays at 12pm starting October 6 and ending November 10. Faculty can also engage with the text and with other participants asynchronously through a Canvas course with Perusall integrated.
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Session 3
Reading:
– Chapter 5 – Decentralisation, Equity, and Democratisation
This chapter critiques the managerial takeover of universities and explores how “bullshit governance” has replaced academic collegiality with corporate control structures. We’ll examine how the rise of the “manageriat” has marginalized faculty and students from decision-making while reinforcing colonial hierarchies through overwhelmingly white, male leadership. The discussion will consider what democratic, cooperative governance might look like in our own institutional contexts and how power could be redistributed to serve the common good rather than market imperatives.
This event is part of Critical Conversations: creating space for and educating one another about our multiple cultural contexts, activism, civil discourse, and academic engagement.