posted on 2018-06-21, 08:02authored byPat O'ConnorPat O'Connor, Estrella Montez López, Clare O'Hagan, Andrea Wolffram, Manuela Aye, Valentina Chizzola, Ornella Mich, Georgi Apostolov, Irina Topuzova, Gulsun Sağlamer, Mine G. Tan, Hülya Çağlayan
Excellence has become a ‘hoorah’ word which is widely used in higher education institutions to legitimate practices related to the recruitment/progression of staff. It can be seen as reflecting an institutionalised belief that such evaluative processes are unaffected by the social characteristics of those who work in them or their relationships with each other. Such views have been challenged by gender theorists and by those researching informal power in state structures. The purpose of this article is to raise the possibility that excellence is an ‘idealised cultural construct’ and a ‘rationalising myth’. Drawing on data from qualitative interviews with 67 men and women, who were candidates or evaluators in recruitment/progression processes in five higher educational institutions (in Ireland, Turkey, Bulgaria, Germany and Italy), it conceptualises and illustrates masculinist, relational and ‘local fit’ micro-political practices that are seen to affect such recruitment/progression. Variation exists by gender and by contextual positioning in the process (i.e. as evaluator/candidate). These practices illustrate the perceived importance of the enactment of informal power. The article suggests that the construct of excellence is used to obscure these practices and to maintain organisational legitimacy in the context of multiple stakeholders with conflicting expectations
Funding
Study on Aerodynamic Characteristics Control of Slender Body Using Active Flow Control Technique
Critical Studies in Education; 61 (2), pp. 195-211
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Note
peer-reviewed
Other Funding information
ERC
Rights
This is an Author's Manuscript of an article whose final and definitive form, the Version of Record, has been published inCritical Studies in Education 2017 copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17508487.2017.1381629