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  1. Scholarship as Cultural Production in the Neoliberal University: Working Within and Against ‘Deliverables’.Mary Elizabeth Luka, Alison Harvey, Mél Hogan, Tamara Shepherd & Andrea Zeffiro - 2016 - Studies in Social Justice 9 (2):176-196.
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  • Failed Abstraction - The Problem of Uno Kōzō's Reading of Marx's Theory of the Value Form.Elena Louisa Lange - 2014 - Historical Materialism 22 (1):3-33.
    Uno Kōzō (1897–1977) was Japan’s foremost Marxian economist. His critique of Marx’s method in Capital, especially regarding the ‘premature’ introduction of value-form analysis in Volume I, motivated him to rewrite all three volumes of Capital in his book The Principles of Political Economy (1950–2).Notwithstanding Uno’s increasing popularity in international Marx research, I will present a critical paper that looks at a fundamental misunderstanding in Uno’s reading of the value form. In what is one of the most significant discussions of the (...)
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  • On the Coercive Nature of Research Impact Metrics: The Case Study of Altmetrics and Science Communication.Luis Arboledas-Lérida - 2021 - Social Epistemology 35 (5):461-474.
    This article grasps the coercive character often associated to research impact metrics, in the wake of the ever-growing use of quantitative indicators for the evaluation of the academic performance. It does so by taking a Marxian perspective which underscores what are the historically determined attributes of academic labour that the functioning of impact metrics embodies, unfolding thereby what ‘impact’ really means concerning said social attributes of the scientific enterprise. Science communication via social media, and the array of metrics and indicators (...)
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  • ‘Give the Money Where it’s Due’: The Impact of Knowledge-Sharing via Social Media on the Reproduction of the Academic Labourer.Luis Arboledas-Lérida - 2022 - Social Epistemology 36 (2):251-266.
    This paper addresses the impact that the ever-growing involvement of scientists in knowledge-sharing practices by means of social media might have on the material conditions under which academic labour-power reproduces itself. Science communication is advocated for on the basis of its supposedly altruistic character, so scientists are prevented from expecting any form of remuneration ensuing from it. However, as our Marxian-informed analysis of the determinations of the value of the commodity labour-power will elucidate, this novel duty involves the exertion of (...)
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  • In, Against, and Beyond: A Marxist Critique for Higher Education in Crisis.Krystian Szadkowski & Jakub Krzeski - 2019 - Social Epistemology 33 (6):463-476.
    ABSTRACTThis article introduces a general framework for the critique of the university in crisis that originates in the Marxist tradition. After indicating the limitations of current proposals rega...
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  • The Gap Between Science and Society and the Intrinsically Capitalistic Character of Science Communication.Luis Arboledas-Lérida - 2023 - Social Epistemology 37 (5):698-712.
    The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that Science Communication inheres to the capitalist relations of production. By making use of Marxist dialectics, the enquiry will elucidate the enquiry will elucidate that capital creates the gap between science and society that Science Communication is deemed to bridge, for capitalism deprives workers of the ‘intellectual potencies of the material process of production’ and makes both impossible and meaningless for them to appropriate scientific knowledge in a direct, unmediated manner. Along these (...)
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