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A scholarly quest for meaning : Negotiating scholar-activism at the intersection of structure and agency

Bashiri, Farzana LU (2025) In Lund Studies in Economics and Management
Abstract
Universities, operating at the intersection of state, market, and civil society, are increasingly called upon to address urgent global challenges, such as climate change, inequalities, and social injustice. This has given rise to hybrid roles for scholars, ranging from public intellectuals to policy advisers and academic entrepreneurs. Among these roles, scholar-activism stands out by explicitly aligning scholarship with political struggle, often stirring controversy. It raises pressing questions about the role of scholars in social struggles and the balance between academic legitimacy and social responsibility.

Scholar-activism may be defined as the mobilization of academic capacities in support of transformative,... (More)
Universities, operating at the intersection of state, market, and civil society, are increasingly called upon to address urgent global challenges, such as climate change, inequalities, and social injustice. This has given rise to hybrid roles for scholars, ranging from public intellectuals to policy advisers and academic entrepreneurs. Among these roles, scholar-activism stands out by explicitly aligning scholarship with political struggle, often stirring controversy. It raises pressing questions about the role of scholars in social struggles and the balance between academic legitimacy and social responsibility.

Scholar-activism may be defined as the mobilization of academic capacities in support of transformative, counter-hegemonic social change. It embraces the political and normative dimensions of scholarship and is rooted in long-term engagement with movements, community organizations, and campaigns. However, in practice, the concept is fluid and contested, shaped by local, institutional, and socio-political contexts.

This thesis investigates the diverse meanings, practices, and tensions of scholar-activism. It consists of four studies: two literature reviews and two empirical studies from Sweden and South Africa. Drawing on a political sociology of science and critical realism, it demonstrates, first, the practices of scholar-activism within teaching, research, and collaboration. Second, it highlights the underlying structures that enable or constrain scholar-activism, including geopolitical and historical contexts, disciplinary norms, governance structures, and dominant epistemic regimes. Finally, it illustrates the internal and social negotiations that mediate between structure and agency, namely mobilizing emancipatory motivations, engaging criticality, navigating legitimacy, and negotiating trust and solidarity.

This thesis reveals not only the ambiguities and uncertainties surrounding the meaning and boundaries of scholar-activism but also how structural realities—geopolitical, institutional, and disciplinary—shape those ambiguities. It demonstrates that activism does not emerge as a fixed role but as a dynamic negotiation at the intersection of agency and structure. By applying a political sociology of science lens, it shows the value of combining constructivist and realist insights. Furthermore, by extending the knowledge field beyond Global North contexts, the thesis offers a richer, contextually sensitive understanding of what it means to make scholarship matter. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Dr Brax, David, Swedish Secretariat for Gender Research, University of Gothenburg
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
scholar-activism, academic activism, critical realism, structure, agency, reflexivity, Sweden, South Africa
in
Lund Studies in Economics and Management
issue
177
pages
89 pages
publisher
Lund University
defense location
EC3:108
defense date
2025-11-11 13:15:00
ISBN
978-91-8104-710-3
I978-91-8104-709-7
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2ce8ad0d-1ac9-4e40-af90-bc08cd3cbc3a
date added to LUP
2025-10-20 09:42:50
date last changed
2025-10-21 11:46:41
@phdthesis{2ce8ad0d-1ac9-4e40-af90-bc08cd3cbc3a,
  abstract     = {{Universities, operating at the intersection of state, market, and civil society, are increasingly called upon to address urgent global challenges, such as climate change, inequalities, and social injustice. This has given rise to hybrid roles for scholars, ranging from public intellectuals to policy advisers and academic entrepreneurs. Among these roles, scholar-activism stands out by explicitly aligning scholarship with political struggle, often stirring controversy. It raises pressing questions about the role of scholars in social struggles and the balance between academic legitimacy and social responsibility.<br/><br/>Scholar-activism may be defined as the mobilization of academic capacities in support of transformative, counter-hegemonic social change. It embraces the political and normative dimensions of scholarship and is rooted in long-term engagement with movements, community organizations, and campaigns. However, in practice, the concept is fluid and contested, shaped by local, institutional, and socio-political contexts.<br/><br/>This thesis investigates the diverse meanings, practices, and tensions of scholar-activism. It consists of four studies: two literature reviews and two empirical studies from Sweden and South Africa. Drawing on a political sociology of science and critical realism, it demonstrates, first, the practices of scholar-activism within teaching, research, and collaboration. Second, it highlights the underlying structures that enable or constrain scholar-activism, including geopolitical and historical contexts, disciplinary norms, governance structures, and dominant epistemic regimes. Finally, it illustrates the internal and social negotiations that mediate between structure and agency, namely mobilizing emancipatory motivations, engaging criticality, navigating legitimacy, and negotiating trust and solidarity.<br/><br/>This thesis reveals not only the ambiguities and uncertainties surrounding the meaning and boundaries of scholar-activism but also how structural realities—geopolitical, institutional, and disciplinary—shape those ambiguities. It demonstrates that activism does not emerge as a fixed role but as a dynamic negotiation at the intersection of agency and structure. By applying a political sociology of science lens, it shows the value of combining constructivist and realist insights. Furthermore, by extending the knowledge field beyond Global North contexts, the thesis offers a richer, contextually sensitive understanding of what it means to make scholarship matter.}},
  author       = {{Bashiri, Farzana}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-8104-710-3}},
  keywords     = {{scholar-activism; academic activism; critical realism; structure; agency; reflexivity; Sweden; South Africa}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  number       = {{177}},
  publisher    = {{Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Lund Studies in Economics and Management}},
  title        = {{A scholarly quest for meaning : Negotiating scholar-activism at the intersection of structure and agency}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/230824884/Farzana_Bashiri_-_WEBB.pdf}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}