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Research Article

From Religion to Politics: Debates and Confrontations over American College Governance in the Mid-Eighteenth Century

Jurgen Herbst
Harvard Educational Review September 1976, 46 (3) 397-424; DOI: https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.46.3.h4265771812q8127
Jurgen Herbst
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Abstract

Questions of who will govern and how authority will be exercised pervade the history of American higher education. Such questions were particularly pressing before there was a clear distinction between public and private colleges. In this article,Jurgen Herbst traces the evolution of college governance from the early eighteenth century, when church and state exercised joint control, to the mid-eighteenth century,when religious, secular, and political tensions strained the effectiveness of that model. In the face of increasing ethnic and religious diversity in the colonies and amidst the breakdown of the alliance between ecclesiastical and secular interests, a more pluralistic model of college governance began to emerge. Professor Herbst examines the turmoil in Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, which, by the end of the eighteenth century, culminated in a new distinction between private and public higher education.

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Harvard Educational Review
Vol. 46, Issue 3
1 Sep 1976
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From Religion to Politics: Debates and Confrontations over American College Governance in the Mid-Eighteenth Century
Jurgen Herbst
Harvard Educational Review Sep 1976, 46 (3) 397-424; DOI: 10.17763/haer.46.3.h4265771812q8127

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From Religion to Politics: Debates and Confrontations over American College Governance in the Mid-Eighteenth Century
Jurgen Herbst
Harvard Educational Review Sep 1976, 46 (3) 397-424; DOI: 10.17763/haer.46.3.h4265771812q8127
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