TY - JOUR
T1 - Disruptive change
T2 - institutionalising interdisciplinarity in Chilean state universities
AU - Labraña, Julio
AU - Villalobos, Pablo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Association for Tertiary Education Management.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This article examines how interdisciplinarity is being institutionalised in Chilean state universities operating under a dual governance regime shaped by academic capitalism and commitments to public service. Drawing on document analysis and 27 interviews across five institutions, the study identifies four interrelated dimensions—organisational, cultural, epistemic and strategic leadership—through which interdisciplinarity is structured and contested. Findings show that interdisciplinarity has been incorporated through managerial instruments such as strategic plans, funding schemes and accreditation frameworks, which enable visibility and coordination but leave disciplinary hierarchies largely intact. Academic cultures and evaluation systems continue to privilege disciplinary specialisation, limiting epistemic integration and cultural transformation. Strategic leadership emerges as a mediating force that facilitates adoption but struggles to generate structural change. The Chilean case illustrates a broader paradox: interdisciplinarity becomes administratively viable through managerial governance, yet constrained by the same logics that enable it.
AB - This article examines how interdisciplinarity is being institutionalised in Chilean state universities operating under a dual governance regime shaped by academic capitalism and commitments to public service. Drawing on document analysis and 27 interviews across five institutions, the study identifies four interrelated dimensions—organisational, cultural, epistemic and strategic leadership—through which interdisciplinarity is structured and contested. Findings show that interdisciplinarity has been incorporated through managerial instruments such as strategic plans, funding schemes and accreditation frameworks, which enable visibility and coordination but leave disciplinary hierarchies largely intact. Academic cultures and evaluation systems continue to privilege disciplinary specialisation, limiting epistemic integration and cultural transformation. Strategic leadership emerges as a mediating force that facilitates adoption but struggles to generate structural change. The Chilean case illustrates a broader paradox: interdisciplinarity becomes administratively viable through managerial governance, yet constrained by the same logics that enable it.
KW - academic capitalism
KW - Interdisciplinarity
KW - organisational change
KW - university governance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105018832621
U2 - 10.1080/1360080X.2025.2572159
DO - 10.1080/1360080X.2025.2572159
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105018832621
SN - 1360-080X
JO - Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management
JF - Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management
ER -