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乌干达学生论文生产与销售的道德化

Moralizing the Production and Sale of Student Papers in Uganda

American Sociological Review · 2021
被引 13
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

通过访谈和民族志观察,研究乌干达两所顶尖大学周边代写论文市场的三类研究者(知识生产者、企业家、教育者)如何基于其制度环境和社会阶层构建不同的职业身份与道德辩护。

Abstract

Sociologists have shown that moral understandings of market exchanges can differ between historical periods and institutional settings, but they have paid less attention to how producers’ moral frameworks vary depending on their unequal positions within both markets and institutions. We use interviews and ethnographic observations to examine the vibrant market of research shops selling academic work to students around two of Uganda’s top universities. We identify three groups of researchers—Knowledge Producers, Entrepreneurs, and Educators—who construct different professional identities and moral justifications of their trade, and who orient their market action accordingly. We demonstrate that these identities and moral frameworks reflect an interplay between the institutional contexts and the social class positions that researchers occupy within this illicit market. Knowledge Producers and Entrepreneurs both experienced a sense of “fit” with their respective institutional cultures, but the former now see their work as compromising ideals of research, whereas the latter capitalize on what they view as a broken system. Educators, disadvantaged at both institutions, articulate a framework countering the dominant institutional cultures and sympathetic to underperforming students. This approach illuminates how institutional contexts and individual class positions within them influence producers’ moral frameworks, leading to differentiation of the market.

社会学道德经济高等教育市场伦理非洲研究