Tuesday, April 19, 2022
Portuguese, Brazil
Abstract: The reforms in higher education that have been introduced on a global scale in
recent years have gone hand in glove with the progressive imposition of scientific journal impact factors, all of which points to the rise of academic capitalism and digital labour in universities that is increasingly subject to the logic of the market. A diachronic analysis of this process allows for talking about, paraphrasing Gabriel García Márquez, the chronicle of a commodification process foretold. More than twenty years ago it was clear what was going to
happen, but not how it was going to unfold. Accordingly, this article reconstructs that process, comparing the Spanish case with global trends and highlighting the crucial role that
governmental agencies like the National Agency for Quality Assessment and Accreditation
and specific evaluation tools like the publication of scientific papers in high-impact journals
have played in it. In this analysis, Wallerstein’s core-periphery relations and the concept of
commodity fetishism, as addressed by Walter Benjamin, prove to be especially useful. The
main research question posed in this article is as follows: What does the process of the
commodification of communication research look like in Spain?
Keywords: academic capitalism, higher education, communication research, journal citation
reports, impact indices
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