Deakin University
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Constructing globalisation in international higher education

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conference contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by Mary Dixon
The discourse of internationalization is well established but it appears that globalisation has crept ‘by stealth’ (Currie, 1998) into our international programs resulting in an apparent domination by a neoliberal economic discourse. Clyne, Marginson and Woock (2001), drawing on research regarding globalisation and internationalization in Australian universities, suggest that this domination is so pervasive that the term is “irretrievably lost” to cultural usages of globalisation. This paper arises from a case study of the understandings of globalisation within an international higher education program. Understandings of globalisation were sought from both Australian  and Thai policymakers and participants in an international higher education program. It is argued that domination by the neoliberal discourse is evident and predominant but that, in the use of metaphors of globalisation by these  educators, a repositioned understanding from lived experience exists alongside the economically dominated experience of international higher  education. It is here that divergent understandings of globalisation are  constructed. These findings are of value to those involved in the  internationalization of higher education.

History

Pagination

1 - 12

Location

Auckland, N.Z.

Open access

  • Yes

Start date

2003-11-29

End date

2003-12-03

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1.1 Full written paper - refereed; E Conference publication

Editor/Contributor(s)

P Jeffery

Title of proceedings

NZARE AARE 2003 : Educational research, risks and dilemmas : New Zealand Association for Research in Education, Australian Association for Research in Education Conference 2003

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