ABSTRACT

This volume examines higher education in globalized conditions through a focus on the spatial, historic and economic relations of power in which it is embedded. Distinct geometries of power are emerging as the knowledge production capability of universities is increasingly globalized. Changes in the organization and practices of higher education tend to travel from the ‘West to the rest’. Thus, distinctive geographies of knowledge are being produced, intersected by geometries of power and raising questions about the recognition, production, control and usage of university-produced knowledge in different regions of the world.

What flows of power and influence can be traced in the shifting geographies of higher education? How do national systems locate themselves in global arenas, and what consequences does such positioning have for local practices and relations of higher education? How do universities and university workers respond to the increasing commodification of knowledge? How do consumers of knowledge assess the quality of the ‘goods’ on offer in a global marketplace?

The 2008 volume of the World yearbook addresses these questions, highlighting four key areas:

  • Producing and Reproducing the University— How is the university adapting to the pressures of globalization?
  • Supplying Knowledge—What structural and cultural changes are demanded from the university in its new role as a free market supplier of knowledge?
  • Demanding Knowledge—Marketing and Consumption—How can consumers best assess the quality of education on a global scale?
  • Transnational Academic Flows—What trends are evident in the flow of students, knowledge and capital, with what consequences?

The 2008 volume is interdisciplinary in its approach, drawing on scholarship from accounting, finance and human geography as well as from the field of education. Transnational influences examined include UNESCO and OECD, GATS and the effects of digital technologies. Contrasting contexts include Central and Eastern Europe, Finland, China and India and England.

With its emphasis on the interrelationship of knowledge and power, and its attention to emergent spatial inequalities, Geographies of Knowledge, Geometries of Power: Framing the Future of Higher Education provides a rich and compelling resource for understanding emergent practices and relations of knowledge production and exchange in global higher education.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

Geographies of Knowledge, Geometries of Power: Framing the Future of Higher Education

part I|95 pages

Producing and Reproducing the University

chapter 2|18 pages

Repairing the Deficits of Modernity

The Emergence of Parallel Discourses in Higher Education in Europe

chapter 3|18 pages

The University and the Welfare State in Transition

Changing Public Services in a Wider Context

chapter 4|17 pages

University Leadership in the Twenty-First Century

The Case for Academic Caesarism

chapter 5|18 pages

(Re)Producing Universities

Knowledge Dissemination, Market Power and the Global Knowledge Commons

chapter 6|19 pages

New Tricks and Old Dogs?

The ‘Third Mission' and the Re-Production of the University

part II|75 pages

Supplying Knowledge

chapter 7|17 pages

The Constitution of a New Global Regime

Higher Education in the GATS/ WTO Framework

chapter 8|14 pages

In Quality We Trust?

The Case of Quality Assurance in Finnish Universities

chapter 9|19 pages

HRM in HE

People Reform or Re-Forming People?

chapter 10|19 pages

Policy Incitements to Mobility

Some Speculations and Provocations 1

part III|118 pages

Demanding Knowledge – Marketing And Consumption

chapter 11|21 pages

Towards a High-Skills Economy

Higher Education and the New Realities of Global Capitalism

chapter 12|21 pages

International Student Migration

The Case of Chinese ‘Sea-Turtles'

chapter 13|16 pages

Government Rhetoric and Student Understandings

Discursive Framings of Higher Education ‘Choice'

chapter 14|17 pages

Higher Education

A Powerhouse for Development in a Neo-Liberal Age?

chapter 16|19 pages

The Rise of Private Higher Education in Senegal

An Example of Knowledge Shopping?

part IV|86 pages

Transnational Academic Flows

chapter 18|19 pages

Transnational Academic Mobility in a Global Knowledge Economy

Comparative and Historical Motifs

chapter 19|17 pages

The Chinese Knowledge Diaspora

Communication Networks Among Overseas Chinese Intellectuals

chapter 21|14 pages

The Social Web

Changing Knowledge Systems in Higher Education