ABSTRACT

This volume investigates how international students in and from the Middle East are constructed by nations, institutions, other students, and themselves. Making a valuable contribution to understanding the nuances and complexities of educational politics and priorities affecting these constructions, the text considers the broader impacts of discourse on internationalisation.

Offering a unique combination of critical analysis of educational policies combined with empirical contributions through authors’ own research, chapters highlight intersections between politics, the internationalisation of higher education, and the construction of mobile learners. Emphasising variation and nuance in the internationalisation of policies in the Gulf Cooperation Countries, and other Middle Eastern countries, the volume offers a theoretical framework to help understand the political, educational, and ethical implications of emerging constructions of international students and their comparison across the Middle East.

This timely volume will benefit researchers, academics, and educators with an interest in higher education, international and comparative education, as well as the Middle East more specifically. Those involved with educational education policy and politics, specifically related to the Middle East, will also benefit from this volume.

chapter |10 pages

Editorial

Constructions of (Inter-)National(-ised) Students in the Middle East: Comparative Critical Perspectives

part I|104 pages

Theorising “Internationalised” Students

chapter Chapter 3|17 pages

Gulf Cooperation Council Academic Mobility

What Works, for Whom and Why?

chapter Chapter 4|22 pages

The Representation of International Students

Student Mobility from the Middle East to Turkey

chapter Chapter 5|19 pages

International Credit Mobilities of Syrians during Conflict

Opportunities and Challenges

part II|74 pages

Representations of Internationally (and Intra-Regionally) Mobile Students in and from the Middle East