
The realm of higher education, much like everything else in a global and mobile world, has rapidly altered in the last few decades. More and more universities and seats of higher education are using strategies towards 'internationalization'; by increasing heterogeneity in rank, student composition, resource endowments, faculty profiles, and their social spaces. The essays in this volume take a critical look at universities across South Asia, more specifically, at the dynamics of student mobility and mobilizations existing in such localized social spaces, and compares these with their counterparts in universities across the world. While elite universities in South Asia, as elsewhere, have been caught in a stiff international competition and are aspiring for the highest ranks, students from the most excluded communities and remote parts of the country seek entry to badly endowed universities, facing obstacles during their courses, and upon seeking entry into employment. The volume evaluates such universities as spaces for mobility opportunity and mobilizations in a globally networked world. It combines local and international perspectives with thorough observations of the dynamics in localized university spaces while embedding them in transnational processes.
This volume investigates how universities in South Asia function as transformative social spaces amidst the pressures of global internationalization and local inequality. The authors, Joanna Pfaff-Czarnecka, Susan Thieme, and Andrea Kölbel, utilize a collection of essays to examine the intersection of student mobility and political mobilization. By analyzing the disparity between elite institutions and under-resourced universities, the text argues that higher education serves as both a site of opportunity and a reflection of broader societal exclusion.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of sociology and education recognize this work as a significant contribution to understanding the localized impacts of global academic trends. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the ethnographic observations provided by the contributors.
Page Count:
340
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192689312
ISBN-13:
9780192689313
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