Change refers to any meaningful transformation in ideas, practices, systems, or structures within the academic, scientific, or institutional landscape.

It can be:

  • Theoretical โ€“ shifts in dominant models or paradigms.
  • Technological โ€“ adoption of new tools, methods, or platforms.
  • Cultural โ€“ redefinition of values, ethics, or priorities.
  • Structural โ€“ reforms in governance, funding, access, or evaluation systems.
  • Incremental โ€“ Gradual improvements (e.g. better peer review guidelines).
  • Disruptive โ€“ Sudden and radical shifts (e.g. AI displacing traditional authorship).
  • Performative โ€“ Superficial change meant to appear responsive (e.g. rebranding committees).
  • Catalytic โ€“ Triggered by an external pressure or visionary actor (*see Catalyst*).

Change is often:

  • Blocked by gatekeeping.
  • Diluted by bureaucracy.
  • Feared by institutions reliant on stability and prestige.
  • Rebranded as reform to maintain control without altering power dynamics.
An academic society publishes a review praising AI but implements no change in its own practices โ€” this is *rhetoric without reform*.

Bottom line: *True change questions foundations โ€” not just decorates the faรงade.*

  • change.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 20:49
  • by administrador