While comprehensive research has been conducted on the
Bologna process (BP) as well as on the European Higher
Education Area, the roles of the social sciences in these reforms
have remained mostly overlooked. Based on a systematic
literature review of articles and reports from 1999-2018, the
interplay of social sciences with politics in the creation of the
EHEA is analysed, employing the theoretical concepts of cocoproduction
of knowledge, boundary objects as well as invited
and uninvited participation. The highly abstract and global
concept of the BP becomes so pervasive, as it offers linkages to
various social sciences and politicians. Thus, representatives of
national and European policy explicitly and implicitly interact
with different stakeholders in the social sciences. Two dominant
ways of knowledge production can be identified: classical social
sciences are driven by their own research agenda while new
interdisciplinary fields, such as empirical education research and
higher education research are geared towards measuring and
optimizing the reform(s) on the basis of quantifiable data. While
the latter acts invitedly and highly visibly, the former produces
knowledge mostly uninvitedly and hardly visible – unless it is
taken up by interdisciplinary fields. This takes place: detailed
knowledge about the changes following Bologna and refined
theories are welcomed and employed by interdisciplinary fields.
This presentation can be aligned to the RS’ call to explain how
the Sociology of Knowledge perspective can be employed to
investigate the processes of boundary making within sociology as
a discipline, and how these new alliances challenge sociology as
a discipline.
«
While comprehensive research has been conducted on the
Bologna process (BP) as well as on the European Higher
Education Area, the roles of the social sciences in these reforms
have remained mostly overlooked. Based on a systematic
literature review of articles and reports from 1999-2018, the
interplay of social sciences with politics in the creation of the
EHEA is analysed, employing the theoretical concepts of cocoproduction
of knowledge, boundary objects as well as invited
and uninvite...
»