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Agent of Democracy

Higher Education and the HEX Journey

David W. Brown Deborah Witte

9781945577338
226 pages
Kettering Foundation Press
Overview

The professional mind-set prevailing in higher education today often ignores the “common goods” that only democratic self-rule can provide. Why? Some say the professional mind-set is profoundly antidemocratic, especially when it presumes that specialized knowledge and experience is a sufficient substitute for a democratic process of participating equals. 

Although there are currently many higher education experiments in which the public does set the agenda for research and actually conducts much of the work, there are still too many projects ostensibly done for the public with nothing to be done by the public. How, then, can the academy, with such a mind-set and its preoccupation with hustling prospective students and chasing after academic luminaries, be of any help in renewing democratic practices?

In Agent of Democracy: Higher Education and the HEX Journey, editors David W.. Brown and Deborah Witte, a Kettering Foundation program officer, explore the linkages that have been forged between higher education and a “healthy democracy.” This volume celebrates and expands on the journal Higher Education Exchange, an annual publication of the Kettering Foundation edited by Brown and Witte. For more than 10 years, HEX has published case studies, analysis, news, and ideas about efforts within higher education to develop more democratic societies.
 Agent of Democracy features essays by 10 thoughtful theorists and practitioners whose work regularly appears in the Higher Education Exchange. Their work is a contribution to the resurgent movement bent on strengthening higher education. Chapters in this volume include:

“The Engaged University: A Tale of Two Generations,” Peter Levine

“The Limits of Public Work: A Critical Reflection on the ‘Engaged University’,” Mary Stanley

“Should Higher Education Have a Civic Mission?,” R. Claire Snyder

“Public Work: Civic Populism versus Technocracy in Higher Education,” Harry C. Boyte

“Public Work at Colgate: An Interview with Adam Weinberg”

“Reconstructing a Democratic Tradition of Public Scholarship in the Land-Grant System,” Scott Peters

“A Portrait of a University as a Young Citizen,” Jeremy Cohen

“The Makings of a Public and the Role of the Academy,” Noëlle McAfee

“The New England Center for Civic Live—A Decade of Making a Difference,” Douglas F. Challenger

“Democracy’s Megachallenges Revisited,” David Mathews

Author Bio
David W.. BROWN is coeditor of the Higher Education Exchange and coedited two recent Kettering publications, Agent of Democracy and A Different Kind of Politics. He taught at Yale’s School of Management and New School’s Milano Graduate School. Brown is the author of Organization Smarts (Amacom 2002), The Real Change-Makers: Why Government is Not the Problem or the Solution (Praeger 2012), and America’s Culture of Professionalism: Past, Present, and Prospects (Palgrave Macmillan 2014). Brown has a forthcoming book, Assumptions of the Tea Party Movement: A World of Their Own (Palgrave Macmillan, 2016). DEBORAH WITTE, senior associate with the Kettering Foundation, is coeditor of the Higher Education Exchange. She also serves on the board of trustees of the Ohio Humanities Council. She received her PhD in Leadership and Change from Antioch University.