Higher education, the global governors, and epistemic governance

Автор: Qadir Ali

Журнал: Studia Humanitatis Borealis @studhbor

Рубрика: Политология

Статья в выпуске: 1 (6), 2016 года.

Бесплатный доступ

Using a neo-institutionalist framework of epistemic governance, this paper reviews how individual universities and national systems of higher education globally are being reformed according to a global script. A number of global governors, such as intergovernmental organisations and INGOs, are involved in making and circulating these scripts. However, this perspective highlights that such governance is well-hidden. Most university managers or national policy-makers are not even aware of global governance that functions by working on how we perceive the world and what reforms are desirable. Driven by realist assumptions of the social world (as common in International Relations theories), analysts and activists tend to look at these global governors as power centres that dictate policy measures. Yet, the same analysts stumble against the obvious problem that these ‘governors’ are not governing in the traditional sense of the term. Rather, those reforming their own universities think according to the same global scripts, and generally believe it is a perfectly reasonable and locally appropriate way of reforming. This is one reason why the similar reforms keep taking place around the world despite considerable criticism. The framework of epistemic governance draws attention to systemic, worldwide patterns underlying the hidden politics of national higher education policies, such as massification and utilitarianism as analysed here.

Еще

Epistemic governance, higher education, reform, neoliberalism, sociological institutionalism

Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147225801

IDR: 147225801

Список литературы Higher education, the global governors, and epistemic governance

  • Alasuutari P. Interdependent Decision-Making in Practice: Justification of New Legislation in Six Nation-States/National Policy-Making: Domestication of Global Trends, ed. Alasuutari P., Qadir A. London: Routledge, 2014. P. 25-43.
  • Alasuutari P., Qadir A. Epistemic Governance: An AProach to the Politics of Policy-Making//European Journal of Cultural and Political Sociology. 2014. № 1. P. 67-84.
  • Altbach P. G., Reisberg L., Rumbley L. E. Trends in Global Higher Education: Tracking an Academic Revolution. A Report Prepared for the Unesco 2009 World Conference on Higher Education. Paris: UNESCO, 2009.
  • Boli J., Gallo-Cruz S., Mathias M. World Polity Theory/The International Studies Compendium Project, ed. Denemark R. A. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2011. http://www.isacompendium.com
  • Boli J., Thomas G. M. eds. Constructing World Culture: International Nongovernmental Organizations since 1875. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1999. 380 p.
  • Calderon A. Massification Continues to Transform Higher Education//University World News, 2 September 2012. № 237. http://www.universityworldnews.com/article.php?story=20120831155341147
  • Calhoun C. The University and Public Good//Thesis Eleven. 2006. № 7. P. 7-43.
  • Deem R., Ka Ho Mok, Lucas L. Transforming Higher Education in Whose Image? Exploring the Concept of the 'World-Class' University in Europe and Asia//Higher Education Policy. 2008. № 21. P. 83-97.
  • Delanty G. The Idea of the University in the Global Era: From Knowledge as an End to the End of Knowledge?//Social Epistemology: A Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Policy. 1998. № 1. P. 3-25.
  • Delanty G. The University and Modernity: A History of the Present/The Virtual University? Knowledge, Markets and Management, ed. Kevin Robins and Frank Webster. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. P. 31-48.
  • Dill D. D., Soo M. Academic Quality, League Tables, and Public Policy: A Cross-National Analysis of Universities Ranking System//Higher Education Policy. 2005. P. 495-533.
  • Hajer M. A. Authoritative Governance: Policy-Making in the Age of Mediatization. N.Y.: Oxford University Press, 2009. 220 p.
  • Hardt M., Negri A. Empire. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2009. 496 p.
  • Kamuf P. The Division of Literature, or the University in Deconstruction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997. 268 p.
  • Kant I. The Conflict of the Faculties, trans. Mary J. Gregor (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1992/1798. 217 p.
  • Keeling R. The Bologna Process and the Lisbon Research Agenda: The European Commission's Expanding Role in Higher Education Discourse//European Journal of Education. 2006. № 2. P. 204-223.
  • Mamdani M. Scholars in the Marketplace: The Dilemmas of Neo-Liberal Reform at Makerere University 1998-2005. Dakar: Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa, 2007. 316 p.
  • Mautner G. The Entrepreneurial University//Critical Discourse Studies. 2005. № 2. P. 95-120.
  • Merisotis J., Sadiak J. Higher Education Rankings: Evolution, Acceptance, and Dialogue//Higher Education in Europe. 2005. № 2. P. 97-101.
  • Meyer J. W. et al. Higher Education as an Institution/Sociology of Higher Education: Contributions and Their Contexts, ed. Gumport P. J. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007. P. 187-221.
  • Meyer J. W. The Nation as Babbitt: How Countries Conform//Contexts. 2004. № 3. P. 42-47.
  • Meyer J. W. World Society, Institutional Theories, and the Actor//Annual Review of Sociology. 2010. №36. P. 1-20.
  • Meyer J. W., Ramirez F. O. The World Institutionalization of Education/Discourse Formation in Comparative Education, ed. Schriewer J. N. Y.: Peter Lang, 2000. P. 111-132.
  • Meyer J. W., Ramirez F. O., Soysal Y. World Expansion of Mass Education//Sociology of Education. 1992. № 2. P. 128-149.
  • Mundy K. ‘Education for All' and the Global Governors/Who Governs the Globe?, ed. Avant D. D., Finnemore M., Sell S. K. Cambridge Studies in International Relations. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2010. P. 333-355.
  • Qadir A. The Ideal of Utility in British Indian Policy: Tropes of the Colonial Chrestomathic University, 1835-1904//South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies. 2014. № 2. P. 197-211.
  • Qadir A. Culture and History in the Domestication of Global Trends of Higher Education in Pakistan/National Policy-Making: Domestication of Global Trends. ed. Alasuutari P., Qadir A. London: Routledge, 2014. P. 147-163.
  • Ramirez F. O. Eyes Wide Shut: University, State and Society//European Educational Research Journal. 2002. № 2. 256-272.
  • Ramirez F. O. Beyond Achievement and Attainment Studies-Revitalizing a Comparative Sociology of Education//Comparative Education. 2006. № 3. P. 431-449.
  • Ramirez F. O. et al. Student Achievement and National Economic Growth//American Journal of Education. 2006. № 1. P. 1-29.
  • Readings B. The University in Ruins. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997. 256 p.
  • Robertson S. L. Market Multilateralism, the World Bank Group and the Asymmetries of Globalising Higher Education: Toward a Critical Political Economy Analysis/International Organizations and Higher Education Policy: Thinking Globally, Acting Locally?, ed. Bassett R., Maldonado A. London: Routledge, 2009. P. 113-131.
  • Schofer E. et al. Sociological Institutionalism and World Society/The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Political Sociology. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 2012. P. 57-68.
  • Schofer S., Meyer J. W. Worldwide Expansion of Higher Education in the 20th Century//American Sociological Review. 2005. № 70. P. 898-920.
  • Spanos W. V. The End of Education: Toward Posthumanism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993. 304 p.
  • Task Force on Higher Education & Society. Higher Education in Developing Countries: Peril and Promise. Washington, DC: World Bank, 2000. 135 p.
  • UNESCO Statistics. Available at: http://uis.unesco.org/en/topic/higher-education (accessed 15 April 2015).
  • World Bank. Higher Education: Lessons of Experience. Washington DC: World Bank, 1994. 105 p. Available at: http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EDUCATION/Resources/278200-1099079877269/547664-1099079956815/Hig herEd_lessons_En.pdf (accessed 15 April 2015).
Еще
Статья научная