Universities as anarchic knowledge institutions

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Universities are knowledge institutions. Compared to several other knowledge institutions (e.g., schools, government research organisations, think tanks), research universities have unusual, anarchic organisational features. We argue that such anarchic features are not a weakness. Rather, they reflect the special standing of research universities among knowledge institutions. We contend that the distributed, self-organising mode of knowledge production maintains a diversity of approaches, topics and solutions needed in frontier research, which involves generating relevant knowledge under uncertainty. Organisational disunity and inconsistencies should sometimes be protected by institutional structures and procedures in order for research universities to best serve their purpose as knowledge institutions. The quality control for the knowledge produced stems from knowledge fields, clusters of knowledge and research that exist beyond the confines of individual organisations. The diversity of epistemic contributions is therefore kept in check by the order imposed by the internal logic of science as a social practice. Our argument provides a new defence for the autonomy of research conducted at universities.
Original languageEnglish
JournalSocial Epistemology : a journal of knowledge, culture and policy
Number of pages16
ISSN0269-1728
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Dec 2023
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 611 Philosophy
  • Higher education
  • Institutional epistemology
  • knowledge field
  • research university

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