Description
Patrick Raines and Charles Leathers present an integrated, coherent theory to explain the behavior of universities and provide a realistic economic model that predicts how universities allocate their scarce educational resources. This alternative view is contrasted with the mainstream explanations of university behavior based on the maximization of student welfare or faculty influences. The authors extend the existing literature on the operation of universities by presenting a history of the evolution of the modern entrepreneurial universities as well as an explanation of academic capitalism.
This absorbing volume will appeal to anyone interested in the history of economic thought or the history of education. Scholars of Veblen, Smith, and Malthus will be fascinated by their individual and comparative theories of the purpose and failures of higher education.
About the Author
J. Patrick Raines, Dean and Professor of Economics, Belmont University, US and the late Charles G. Leathers, formerly Professor of Economics, University of Alabama, US
Reviews
'This is an excellent book on the history of economic thought on higher education institutions. . . Written in a lucid style, the book should interest anyone interested in the development of higher education would find it indispensable, as it provides a rich critical synthesis of valuable writings and opinions of a long array of economists on universities. The book also has a lot of relevance for the policymakers engaged in university reforms.' -- Jandhyala B.G. Tilak, Journal of Educational Planning and Administration
'. . . this is a book that can confidently be recommended to anyone with a serious interest in higher education policy or management as well as to any undergraduate or postgraduate students of the economics of higher education.' -- Gareth Williams, Higher Education Review
Book Information
ISBN 9781840649918
Author J. P. Raines
Format Hardback
Page Count 264
Imprint Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Publisher Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd