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Cross-border higher education: regulation, quality assurance and impact

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Abstract

Higher education systems worldwide are undergoing manifold changes, including a significant increase in private provision. This includes cross-border higher education, where institutions, programmes, students and/or staff cross national borders. Cross-border higher education offers both opportunities and challenges for education systems, their respective communities and countries at large. The challenges are especially important in developing countries, where social demand for higher education is high and expected to increase. Yet many of these countries lack adequate regulation and quality assurance mechanisms. An IIEP research project analyzed the status, specific features and impact of cross-border provision. It focused on institutional and programme mobility, which pose the greatest challenges to national authorities. Seven case studies from Africa, Asia and Latin America were chosen. This first volume of the publication presents a comparative synthesis as well as the cases of Chile, Oman, the Philippines and South Africa. The second volume comprises the cases of Argentina, Kenya and Russia.

Author
Martin, Michaela
Lemaitre, Maria-José
Wilkinson, Roy
Al Hajry, Amer
Tayag, Jean
Naidoo, Prem
Singh, Mala
Villanueva, Ernesto
Kabeira, Festus
Karpukhina, Elena A.
Corporate Author
UNESCO IIEP
Year of publication
2007
Imprint
Paris (UNESCO, IIEP, 2007, p.2 vol. (331, 349)
Level of education
ISBN
978-92-803-1302-9(vol.1); 978-92-803-1303-1(vol.1)
Notes
Incl. graphs, tables and bibl. references
Source database
curatED
Language