Emerging Issues of Globalization And Higher Education
Published: 2012
Author(s) Name: P. Siva Kumar, A. Mahadevan
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Abstract
For higher education, globalization implies the broad
social, economic, and technological forces that shape
the realities of the 21st century. These elements
include advanced information technology, new ways
of thinking about financing higher education and a
concomitant acceptance of market forces and
commercialization, unprecedented mobility for
students and professors, the global spread of common
ideas about science and scholarship, the role of English
as the main international language of science, and
other developments. Today, trends such as the rise
of the Internet and the globalization of knowledge
have the potential for creating severe problems for
academic institutions and systems in smaller or poorer
nations. In a world divided into centers and
peripheries, the centers grow stronger and more
dominant and the peripheries become increasingly
marginalized. Inequalities grow more pronounced.
The traditional academic center becomes ever
stronger and more dominant-mainly in the Englishspeaking
countries of the North (the United States,
the United Kingdom, Canada) and in Australia, and
in the larger countries of the European Union (notably
Germany and France, and to some extent Italy and
Spain).
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