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The Shock Doctrine Comes to Canada: Laurentian University’s Insolvency Claim and the Neoliberal Tide

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Shock Doctrine Comes to Canada: Laurentian University’s Insolvency Claim and the Neoliberal Tide
Abstract
During the depths of COVID-19, Laurentian University, a small Canadian postsecondary institution located in the mid-sized city of Sudbury Canada, declared that it was insolvent and was legally allowed to terminate one-third of its faculty and cut almost one-half of its academic programmes. This historically unprecedented attack on a Canadian public institution utilized a Federal corporate court process, the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA), a piece of legislation akin to the US Chapter 11 process. The result of the still-ongoing process saw the university Administration and Board of Governors working against the interests of the community, targeting the arts, Indigenous, Francophone and working-class communities. This article poses the question ‘to whom do universities belong, and at what point does a publicly funded university stop being a collective “social good” – responsible to the society that spawned it – and start being a stand-alone organization that serves private interests?’
Publication
Critical Sociology
Volume
47
Issue
7-8
Pages
1147-1157
Date
2021
Journal Abbr
Critical Sociology
Language
en
ISSN
0896-9205
Short Title
The Shock Doctrine Comes to Canada
Accessed
7/8/22, 4:43 PM
Library Catalog
SAGE Journals
Extra
Publisher: SAGE Publications Ltd
Citation
Roth, R. (2021). The Shock Doctrine Comes to Canada: Laurentian University’s Insolvency Claim and the Neoliberal Tide. Critical Sociology, 47(7–8), 1147–1157. https://doi.org/10.1177/08969205211046656