He was born Hamish Watson, a surfie dude from Sydney – but he could morph into whatever you needed him to be. Hamish is due to be sentenced to jail in early 2019 for swindling a handful of victims out of more than $7m. But these crimes are just the final pages in a resume too thick to staple; for decades he’s duped victims in the US, Canada, Britain, Hong Kong and Australia. How did he do it? How did he evade authorities around the world for so long and what’s he done with all those tens of ...
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What's the academy worth today?
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Manage episode 480049268 series 3127785
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Subscribe to the Academy of Ideas Substack for more information on the next Battle and future events: https://clairefox.substack.com/subscribe WHAT'S THE ACADEMY WORTH TODAY? http://archive.battleofideas.org.uk/2012/session_detail/6826 University education in the 21st century, in a great number of countries, is subject to an increasingly large number of intense challenges. It is expensive for an expanding student body that views it as a necessary step on the career ladder. It can be viewed as a costly luxury by governments and taxpayers alike: forced to dress itself up vital to the economy. It is expected to demonstrate the value of its research activities in terms of their useful ‘impact’ on society. Overall, the contemporary pressures on the university seem to express a view of it as a means, an instrument, to an end: a demand that a university be for something. Should we consider first just what a university is? In the Academy itself there is less and less agreement about what a university should be. This may reflect the increasing specialisation, some would say fragmentation, of disciplines and departments despite pious lip-service paid to the virtue of interdisciplinarity. Many countries have definitely seen huge quantitative changes (ever growing number of students) as well as qualitative ones that have certainly transformed what universities are today. In Greece there is also the issue of “university asylum” despite its repeal last year: alleged incidents of widespread lawlessness on campuses home to youth wings of political parties; with political activists blocking attempts at reform. At the same time, many argue that the traditional Greek academic model, with the high authority of the professor and the pursuit of knowledge as intrinsically worthwhile, is worth preserving. Some say the golden age of the university has always been in the past, this is just another crisis we will resolve. Others say this is the golden age of the university: it was high time the ivory tower was broken into and sleepy professors forced to wake up to the demands of the real world. Some argue that they should be the solution to today’s economic crisis: teaching Tourism Studies for all they are worth. Some want them to be privatised. All work, one way or another, in universities that don’t seem to live up to the name of a ‘university’, at least in a traditional sense. So, if we still hold to the ideal of a universal education for all, then do we have to determine again what that education should consist of and how it should be delivered? The evolution of the university from Plato’s Academy to massive ‘multiversities’, the lack of clarity about the very value of higher education, suggests that now might be the time to address that question. Speakers Angus Kennedy convenor, The Academy; author, Being Cultured: in defence of discrimination Vasso Kindi associate professor of philosophy, University of Athens Dr Nikos Sotirakopoulos lecturer in sociology, University of Loughborough; author, The Rise of Lifestyle Activism: From New Left to Occupy Professor Thanos Veremis emeritus professor, political history, University of Athens; founding member, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP) Chair Dr Ashley Frawley Senior lecturer in sociology and social policy, Swansea University; author, The Semiotics of Happiness: rhetorical beginnings of a public problem
…
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1414 episodes
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 480049268 series 3127785
Content provided by Academy of Ideas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Academy of Ideas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
Subscribe to the Academy of Ideas Substack for more information on the next Battle and future events: https://clairefox.substack.com/subscribe WHAT'S THE ACADEMY WORTH TODAY? http://archive.battleofideas.org.uk/2012/session_detail/6826 University education in the 21st century, in a great number of countries, is subject to an increasingly large number of intense challenges. It is expensive for an expanding student body that views it as a necessary step on the career ladder. It can be viewed as a costly luxury by governments and taxpayers alike: forced to dress itself up vital to the economy. It is expected to demonstrate the value of its research activities in terms of their useful ‘impact’ on society. Overall, the contemporary pressures on the university seem to express a view of it as a means, an instrument, to an end: a demand that a university be for something. Should we consider first just what a university is? In the Academy itself there is less and less agreement about what a university should be. This may reflect the increasing specialisation, some would say fragmentation, of disciplines and departments despite pious lip-service paid to the virtue of interdisciplinarity. Many countries have definitely seen huge quantitative changes (ever growing number of students) as well as qualitative ones that have certainly transformed what universities are today. In Greece there is also the issue of “university asylum” despite its repeal last year: alleged incidents of widespread lawlessness on campuses home to youth wings of political parties; with political activists blocking attempts at reform. At the same time, many argue that the traditional Greek academic model, with the high authority of the professor and the pursuit of knowledge as intrinsically worthwhile, is worth preserving. Some say the golden age of the university has always been in the past, this is just another crisis we will resolve. Others say this is the golden age of the university: it was high time the ivory tower was broken into and sleepy professors forced to wake up to the demands of the real world. Some argue that they should be the solution to today’s economic crisis: teaching Tourism Studies for all they are worth. Some want them to be privatised. All work, one way or another, in universities that don’t seem to live up to the name of a ‘university’, at least in a traditional sense. So, if we still hold to the ideal of a universal education for all, then do we have to determine again what that education should consist of and how it should be delivered? The evolution of the university from Plato’s Academy to massive ‘multiversities’, the lack of clarity about the very value of higher education, suggests that now might be the time to address that question. Speakers Angus Kennedy convenor, The Academy; author, Being Cultured: in defence of discrimination Vasso Kindi associate professor of philosophy, University of Athens Dr Nikos Sotirakopoulos lecturer in sociology, University of Loughborough; author, The Rise of Lifestyle Activism: From New Left to Occupy Professor Thanos Veremis emeritus professor, political history, University of Athens; founding member, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP) Chair Dr Ashley Frawley Senior lecturer in sociology and social policy, Swansea University; author, The Semiotics of Happiness: rhetorical beginnings of a public problem
…
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