“…This increasingly vies with a 'utilitarian' logic associated with strategic research and such concepts as the entrepreneurial (and occasionally civic) university, a logic which is particularly engrained in research intensive universities (Shields and Watermeyer, 2018). Finally, a 'managerial' logic, aligned with new public management practices (Docherty, 2016), reflects universities as increasingly bureaucratic, centralised and competitive organisations (Martin, 2016;McCann et al, 2020). Such logics heavily influence and configure behaviours and practices, which over time become embedded, routinised and repetitive, in turn maintaining institutions 1 associated with them (Lawrence and Suddaby, 2006).…”