Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ===== 🏛️ Institutional Prestige (Academic Definition) ===== **Institutional [[prestige]]** refers to the elevated reputation, influence, and symbolic authority of certain universities, hospitals, research centers, or professional organizations — often used as a shortcut to confer credibility and importance on people or publications associated with them. ==== 📌 Key Components ==== * **Historical reputation** (e.g., Harvard, Oxford, Mayo Clinic) * **Selective access** (high entry barriers for students or staff) * **Funding power** and elite partnerships * **Media visibility** and global rankings * **Influence over policy, publication, and peer networks** ==== 🧠 In Practice ==== > A review paper from a top-tier university may be accepted or cited widely regardless of its scientific merit, simply due to its **affiliation halo**. ==== 🎭 Risks and Criticisms ==== * **Merit by association** – assuming quality due to the name on the letterhead. * **Gatekeeping** – preference given to prestigious institutions in funding, publishing, and peer review. * **Bias reinforcement** – ideas from lesser-known institutions face higher scrutiny. * **Stagnation** – established institutions dominate discourse, discouraging innovation from below. ==== 📎 Related Terms ==== * [[academic_prestige|Academic Prestige]] * [[gatekeeping|Gatekeeping]] * [[careerism|Careerism]] * [[formalism|Formalism]] * [[academic_theater|Academic Theater]] ---- **Bottom line**: *Institutional prestige can open doors — but also close minds.* institutional_prestige.txt Last modified: 2025/06/15 20:37by administrador