Abstract
Marketization and quantification have become ingrained in academia over the past few decades. The trust in numbers and incentives has led to a proliferation of devices that individualize, induce, benchmark, and rank academic performance. As an instantiation of that trend, this article focuses on the establishment and contestation of ‘algorithmic allocation’ at a Dutch university medical centre. Algorithmic allocation is a form of data-driven automated reasoning that enables university administrators to calculate the overall research budget of a department without engaging in a detailed qualitative assessment of the current content and future potential of its research activities. It consists of a range of quantitative performance indicators covering scientific publications, peer recognition, PhD supervision, and grant acquisition. Drawing on semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and document analysis, we contrast the attempt to build a rationale for algorithmic allocation-citing unfair advantage, competitive achievement, incentives, and exchange-with the attempt to challenge that rationale based on existing epistemic differences between departments. From the specifics of the case, we extrapolate to considerations of epistemic and market fairness that might equally be at stake in other attempts to govern the production of scientific knowledge in a quantitative and market-oriented way.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 15-25 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | Politics and Governance |
| Volume | 8 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Early online date | 9 Apr 2020 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Apr 2020 |
Funding
Govert Valkenburg is a Senior Researcher in Science, Technology and Society Studies at the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. He currently studies knowledge dynamics in innovation processes and connects them to political theories. His research has covered energy transitions, privacy and security technologies, and human genomics. He was recently awarded a personal Researcher Project grant by the Research Council of Norway, for research into knowledge equity in the securitization of critical infrastructures. The research conducted for this article was funded by The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW). We would like to thank the reviewers for their critical and constructive comments.
| Funders |
|---|
| ZonMw |
| Norges forskningsråd |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 17 Partnerships for the Goals
Keywords
- Algorithmic allocation
- Higher education
- Marketization
- Performance indicators
- Quantification
- Resource allocation
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