Aristocracy and accountability
In the Chronicle of Higher Education, I spoke to Lindsay Ellis about memories of encountering the American aristocracy for the first time in college, and how the Kavanaugh hearings are […]
In the Chronicle of Higher Education, I spoke to Lindsay Ellis about memories of encountering the American aristocracy for the first time in college, and how the Kavanaugh hearings are […]
I’m on podcast #33 of the very informative “Understanding Latin American Politics” podcast with Greg Weeks. We talk about how I got started doing the kind of work that I […]
At Inside Higher Ed, I have a how-to guide to academic Twitter with a prologue on academic precarity and public engagement. “Precarity helped create the new public scholar,” I argue: […]
My latest column for Inside Higher Ed updates my viral essay from March 2014 about the job market, and asks us to use a bit of Rawls to think about […]
My latest on issues in higher education is up, on the subject of how to treat contingent faculty with respect. It used to be the case that non-tenure-track faculty were […]
Now up at Inside Higher Ed: The basic argument against the conference interview is straightforward: It imposes considerable costs on the interviewees at a time in their lives when they […]
An essay I wrote about my experience on the academic job market, my children, and my mother’s death, has been featured at Inside Higher Ed. The key sentences: “how do […]