Knowledge Under Siege: Charting a Future for Universities

Author:   Marc Spooner (University of Regina) ,  James McNinch (University of Regina)
Publisher:   University of Regina Press
ISBN:  

9781779401274


Pages:   360
Publication Date:   17 February 2026
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
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Knowledge Under Siege: Charting a Future for Universities


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Author:   Marc Spooner (University of Regina) ,  James McNinch (University of Regina)
Publisher:   University of Regina Press
Imprint:   University of Regina Press
Weight:   0.500kg
ISBN:  

9781779401274


ISBN 10:   1779401272
Pages:   360
Publication Date:   17 February 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Foreword • Gloria Ladson-Billing  Preface • Marc Spooner and James McNinch  Introduction: A Renewed Hope • Marc Spooner and James McNinch SECTION ONE. UNIVERSITY AND ITS ROLES What are Universities For? • Jonathan R. Cole Universities are Playspaces • Whitney Blaisdell Universities in a Democratic Society • Joel Westheimer SECTION TWO. CRITICAL UNIVERSITY STUDIES Relations of Power in Worldwide University Science • Simon Marginson For What and For Whom Are Universities? • Consuelo Chapela From Neoliberalism to Authoritarianism: Universities, Metrics, Regulation and Surrender to Governmental Control • Liz Morrish Resistance and Redirection in the Managerial University • Peter S. McInnis SECTION THREE. RE-FRAMING THE RESPONSIVE UNIVERSITY Higher Education and Academics Must “Step Up” • Kevin K. Kumashiro Reimagining the Pedagogy of Truth • Sheila Cote-Meek Complicities, Margins, Resistance: Colleges, Plantations and Bearing Witness • Piya Chatterjee When Should Universities Take a Stand? • Shannon Dea SECTION FOUR. IMAGINING OUR COLLECTIVE FUTURE AND THE FUTURE OF UNIVERSITIES The University’s Four Futures; or, the Real Humanities Crisis and its Cures • Christopher Newfield Is Hope Practical? Re-making Universities in an Era of Climate Crisis • Tom Sperlinger Te Whare Wānanga o Awanuiārangi: What Are Universities For • Linda Tuhiwai Smith sîpâ waskwâhk (underneath the birch tree): ê-iskocêsihkêhk (creating sparks for a fire)—The Need for Indigenous Knowledge in Universities • Tammy Ratt Conclusion: A Call to Hope • James McNinch and Marc Spooner Afterword: The Future of Universities, Knowledge, and Democracies • Malinda S. Smith  Index

Reviews

“Around the world, universities are key battlegrounds in the fight against fascism. But as the contributors to this volume understand, we have to do more than aspire for a restoration of the previous, broken academic status quo. This expansive and insightful collection helps clarify the stakes of the current crisis and its antecedents while also exploring possible solutions and more life and learning affirming futures.” -- Astra Taylor, co-founder of the Debt Collective and author of The Age of Insecurity ""Lively and timely, the chapters in this volume remind that universities are worthwhile places for learning, meaning-making and struggle, especially to confront fascism and settler colonialism. But if they can’t do this, we need to create spaces that can."" -- Eve Tuck, James Weldon Johnson Professor of Indigenous Studies at Steinhardt and Gallatin, New York University ""This book will lift your spirits and remind you that the university remains a central place for debate and open dialogue critical for any democracy worth the name.” -- Zeus Leonardo, author of Race Frameworks “Knowledge Under Siege confronts the escalating attacks on universities—defunding, censorship, and the corporatization of learning—and shows why defending higher education is essential to democracy itself. Far from being businesses, universities are vital public institutions where truth is pursued, dissent is fostered, and hope is kept alive. This book is a call to protect the university as a space of critical inquiry, civic courage, justice, and imagination at a moment when its very future hangs in the balance.” -- Henry Giroux, McMaster University Chair for Scholarship in the Public Interest & The Paulo Freire Distinguished Scholar in Critical Pedagogy “A rigorous, urgent call to reframe higher education as a public good worth defending and reimagining.” -- Jessica Riddell, Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair of Undergraduate Teaching Excellence at Bishop’s University and founder of Hope Circuits Institute “Knowledge Under Siege tells the eye-opening story of the many ways universities in Canada and around the world are in serious trouble. From the impact of neo-liberalism to the authoritarian assault on expertise and knowledge, the contributors make a compelling case for what’s gone wrong and issue an urgent call for collective action to reimagine and remake universities that serve the common good.” -- David Robinson, Executive Director, Canadian Association of University Teachers “Totalitarian rule is on the rise, and education is not some random collateral damage—it’s an early and fundamental target. Those of us resisting the siege must grasp the dimensions of the crisis we’re facing—its roots and its reach, its power and also its vulnerabilities. Marc Spooner and James McNinch have assembled an esteemed group of scholars, activists, and organizers who can help us do just that. They not only illuminate the crisis, but they also help us plot a path forward. This is an essential text for this fierce and urgent moment.” -- Bill Ayers, author of When Freedom is the Question Abolition is the Answer ""With piercing clarity and a chorus of urgent voices—students, scholars, resisters, and visionaries—Knowledge Under Siege charts the peril and promise of higher education in a world on edge. It demands we ask: What is the university for? Who does it serve? What truths will it dare to speak? And most critically—will we fight for it, or let it fall?” -- Peter McLaren, Peter McLaren, Professor emeritus, UCLA 1992–2012, Chapman University (retired) 2013–2023, author of Life in Schools


Author Information

Marc Spooner is a professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Regina. His research interests include audit culture, academic freedom, the effects of neoliberalization and corporatization on higher education, social justice, activism, and participatory democracy. James McNinch is professor emeritus and former dean of the Faculty of Education at the University of Regina. His research and publications have focused on teaching and learning in higher education, gender and sexual diversity, racism and white privilege, and the social construction of masculinity.

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