The Bureaucratic Control and Authoritarian Governance of University Teaching Staff via Attendance Recording Systems: Potential Impediments to Academic Innovation, Excellence, and Research Freedom in Developing Countries

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The Bureaucratic Control and Authoritarian Governance of University Teaching Staff via Attendance Recording Systems: Potential Impediments to Academic Innovation, Excellence, and Research Freedom in Developing Countries

Taha Nazir PhD

  1. Editor-in-Chief, Pharmaceutical Review. ISSN 2220-5187 | http://pharmaceuticalsreview.ca | https://pharmaceuticalsreview.com
  2. Ex-President – Pharmacist Federation (Pakistan). http://pharmacistfed.wordpress.com

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Running title: Healthcare system and pharmaceutical patient care.

Keywords: Academic governance, faculty autonomy, bureaucratic control, attendance systems, higher education policy, research freedom, institutional ethics, accountability frameworks.

Note: This manuscript was developed using advanced artificial intelligence tools, digital data repositories, information databases, and contemporary software applications.

doi: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17393303

Abstract: This paper examines the emergence of bureaucratic and surveillance-based mechanisms in the governance of university teaching staff across developing countries. It argues that the proliferation of attendance recording systems—such as biometric tracking, RFID-based verification, and digital monitoring platforms—reflects a profound structural shift from collegial academic governance to managerial authoritarianism. While such systems claim to enhance accountability, they often erode intellectual autonomy, constrain research freedom, and weaken the intrinsic motivation essential for scholarly excellence. Drawing upon organizational theory, institutional isomorphism, and behavioral accountability frameworks, the paper analyzes how surveillance-oriented governance displaces ethical self-regulation and peer responsibility with mechanical control. The study concludes by proposing an alternative model of trust-based, outcome-oriented, and ethically informed accountability that safeguards academic freedom while maintaining institutional integrity.

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