On Knowledge and Capital: Accumulation, Expansion, and the Adaptation of the Land-Grant University
| dc.contributor.author | Gosink, Elhom Salameh | en |
| dc.contributor.committeechair | Caraccioli, Mauro J. | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Commer, Carolyn | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Poets, Desiree | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Jackson, Patrick Thaddeus | en |
| dc.contributor.committeemember | Ovink, Sarah | en |
| dc.contributor.department | Political Science | en |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2026-06-25T08:00:18Z | en |
| dc.date.available | 2026-06-25T08:00:18Z | en |
| dc.date.issued | 2026-06-24 | en |
| dc.description.abstract | This dissertation examines the land-grant university as a site of accumulation, tracing how processes of land, labor, capital, and legitimacy have been historically structured to sustain institutional expansion. Departing from the dominant "crisis consensus" narrative in critical university studies, which frames higher education as perpetually in decline, this study foregrounds the material and structural logics through which these universities persist and grow. Drawing on vignettes of three institutions—Utah State University, Virginia Tech, and the University of California system—each chapter highlights a distinct dimension of accumulation: the territorial foundations of the land-grant system, the historical continuity of military-industrial and state-linked expansion, and contemporary financialization through investment portfolios and real estate deals. Chapter 1 situates the land-grant university within settler-colonial dispossession, demonstrating how land converted into institutional capital under the 1862 Morrill Act shaped curricula, infrastructure, and long-term institutional missions. Chapter 2 examines how universities narrate their own histories, revealing how discourses of democracy, access, and innovation mask persistent mechanisms of accumulation, including labor stratification, material enclosures, and the absorption of critique. Chapter 3 analyzes contemporary financialization, showing how endowments, partnerships, and investment strategies function as extensions of the university's capacity to accumulate resources and legitimacy. Across all three chapters the dissertation emphasizes that accumulation is both economic and epistemological; it organizes knowledge, structures hierarchies, and incorporates dissent into institutional maintenance. By treating accumulation as constitutive rather than incidental, the dissertation reframes the land-grant university not as a neutral site of knowledge or a corrupted public good, but as an institution historically and contemporarily oriented toward growth. This approach clarifies persistent contradictions in higher education: between its supposed public mission and privatization actions, between access and exclusion, and between critique and co-optation. This offers a lens for understanding how universities operate as active economic and political actors. In conclusion, the dissertation positions this critique "in and not of" the university by attending to institutional structures and contradictions, yet engaged with its possibilities, highlighting the processes through which the institution simultaneously enables intellectual work and reproduces systemic hierarchies. | en |
| dc.description.abstractgeneral | This dissertation examines the land-grant university, specifically the institutions and logics created by the 1862 Morrill Act, to understand how they have grown and sustained over time. Rather than focusing on the idea that universities are in decline or crisis, it shows how these institutions have expanded through land, labor, wealth, and reputation. Drawing on examples from three institutions-- Utah State University, Virginia Tech, and the University of California system—each chapter highlights a distinct aspect of this maintenance: how Indigenous land and resources were seized and originally used to build land-grant universities, how universities tell their own stories to emphasize access and innovation while reorganizing and hiding structural inequalities, and how modern investments and real estate portfolios continue to grow institutional wealth and influence. Across the chapters the dissertation emphasizes an organizing logic of accumulation that is both economic and epistemological; it organizes knowledge, structures hierarchies, and incorporates dissent into institutional maintenance. By bringing accumulation to the forefront of analysis, the dissertation shows how the land-grant university is historically and contemporarily oriented toward growth. That is, universities don't just educate—they also organize knowledge, accumulate wealth and labor, and absorb criticism in ways that help them persist and expand. This approach shows how structural tensions in higher education research are intertwined with one another, including, tensions between public missions and private interests, access and exclusion, and critique and co-optation. Overall, it frames universities as active social and economic sites. | en |
| dc.description.degree | Doctor of Philosophy | en |
| dc.format.medium | ETD | en |
| dc.identifier.other | vt_gsexam:46597 | en |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://hdl.handle.net/10919/143494 | en |
| dc.language.iso | en | en |
| dc.publisher | Virginia Tech | en |
| dc.rights | In Copyright | en |
| dc.rights.uri | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ | en |
| dc.subject | Higher education | en |
| dc.subject | land-grant university | en |
| dc.subject | crisis | en |
| dc.subject | accumulation | en |
| dc.title | On Knowledge and Capital: Accumulation, Expansion, and the Adaptation of the Land-Grant University | en |
| dc.type | Dissertation | en |
| thesis.degree.discipline | Social, Political, Ethical, and Cultural Thought | en |
| thesis.degree.grantor | Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University | en |
| thesis.degree.level | doctoral | en |
| thesis.degree.name | Doctor of Philosophy | en |
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