"Compared to other studies on reputation management and branding in higher education, this book adds to our understanding by providing more empirical examples showing the complexity of these phenomena in contemporary HEIs." (Jelle Mampaey, European Journal of Higher Education, August 02, 2019)
Part 1. Introduction
1. Reputation Management, Social Embeddedness and Rationalization of Universities.
T.Christensen, Å.Gornitzka and F.O.Ramirez
Part 2 – Reputation Management.
2. Reputation Management in Nordic Universities – Profiles and Development over Time.
4. Reputation profile of Chinese universities – converging with global trends or national characteristics?
M.Liang and T.Christensen.
5. Social Science Disciplines in Complex Development Contexts – the Professionalization Dimension of Reputation Management.
T.Christensen and L.Klemsdal.
6. What We Stand for: Reputation Platforms in Scandinavian Higher Education.
A.Wæraas and H.L. Sataøen.
Part 3. Social Embeddedness and Organizational Differentiation
7. Marketing the American University: Professionalization of Development in Entrepreneurial Universities.
N.A.Skinner and F.O.Ramirez.
8. Enacting Diversity in American Higher Education.
N.Kwak, S.G.Gavriela and F.O.Ramirez.
9. The Legal Rationalization of American Higher Education.
J.Furuta and F.O.Ramirez.
Part 4. Concluding reflections.
10. Socially embedded universities and the search for meaning
B.Stensaker.
Index
Tom Christensen is Professor of Public Policy and Administration at Department of Political Science, University of Oslo, Norway.
Åse Gornitzka is Professor of Public Policy and Administration at Department of Political Science, University of Oslo, Norway.
Francisco O. Ramirez is Professor of Education and (by courtesy) Sociology, Stanford University, USA.
This book discusses how modern universities increasingly use reputation management in relation to internal and external challenges. Universities are increasingly characterized by social embeddedness, relating to many external stakeholders and international markets of students, researchers and research projects. This implies global pressure to standardize, formalize and rationalize their internal organization. The book uses data from China, Norway and US to show how reputation symbols are used and balanced, based on their web pages. Further, it uses extensive data from US universities to show how their internal organization structure is developing over time, related to three types of units/positions - development, diversity and legal offices and roles.
Tom Christensen is Professor of Public Policy and Administration at Department of Political Science, University of Oslo.
Åse Gornitzka is Professor of Public Policy and Administration at Department of Political Science, University of Oslo.
Francisco O. Ramirez is Professor of Education and (by courtesy) Sociology, Stanford University.