The global spread of national universities

modern state formation and geopolitical anxieties in higher education policy

authored by
Nex Bengson
Abstract

Between the university's mediaeval structure and its postmodern qualifiers, this paper explores the distinct institutional form of the national university. Using organisational and country data with the comparative-historical sequential method, results show that 129 out of 197 countries established a national university around modern independence with most colonising powers never have established one. Their timing and distribution point to geopolitical anxieties from both internal stability and international competition as primary motivations. The paper theorises that the creation of national universities figures within three centripetal tendencies of modern state formation: centralisation, politicisation, and homogenisation.

Organisation(s)
Leibniz Research Centre Science and Society (LCSS)
Type
Article
Journal
Globalisation, Societies and Education
No. of pages
16
ISSN
1476-7724
Publication date
04.04.2024
Publication status
E-pub ahead of print
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Education
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 4 - Quality Education
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1080/14767724.2024.2331534 (Access: Open)