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Perry L. Glanzer – International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2024
A recent global reconnaissance of Christian higher education found a number of key themes that shaped current developments, such as the pressing challenges of secularization and nationalization but also the advantages of privatization and massification. This article provides an update to this older analysis by taking a birds-eye view of trends…
Descriptors: Christianity, Trend Analysis, Educational Trends, Religious Education
Bonnell, Andrew G. – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
This paper proceeds from the view that managerial capture has already become a fundamental problem after a couple of decades of largely untrammelled managerialism in our public universities, and that this problem is likely to be compounded by further shifts towards deregulation and de facto privatisation, which is the direction that current…
Descriptors: Governance, Democratic Values, State Universities, Privatization
Rea, Jeannie – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
While students chanting "No cuts, No fees, No corporate universities" may be dismissed as youthful hyperbole by some, it is not as superficial a characterisation of the state of our public university system as it seems.
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Universities, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Riemer, Nick – Australian Universities' Review, 2016
If we want to combat contemporary "neoliberal" attacks on universities, we should start by refusing the way that their pseudo-rationalities already determine so many aspects of the intellectual and institutional regimes that we consider under threat. This paper sketches an analysis of those aspects of the internal practices of academia…
Descriptors: Humanities, Neoliberalism, Privatization, Educational Change
Hopkins, Susan – Australian Universities' Review, 2015
Providing higher education to offenders in custody has become an increasingly complex business in the age of digital learning. Most Australian prisoners still have no direct access to the internet and relatively unreliable access to information technology. As incarceration is now a business, prisons, like universities, are increasingly subject to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Institutionalized Persons, Electronic Learning
Are Australia's Universities in Deficit? A Tale of Generic Managers, Audit Culture and Casualisation
Kimber, Megan; Ehrich, Lisa C. – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2015
Managerial changes to Australian universities have had considerable impact on employees. In this article, we consider some of these changes and apply a theory known as the democratic deficit to them. This theory was developed from the democratic critique of managerialism, as it has been applied in the public sector in countries with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Accountability, Governance
Shah, Mahsood; Nair, Chenicheri Sid – European Journal of Higher Education, 2012
Private for-profit higher education has grown rapidly in many parts of the world. This growth is attributed to many factors, including a broadening of the student population and the recognition that wider access to higher education will be economically beneficial to individuals, governments and the society as a whole. In Australia, the number of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Private Colleges, Proprietary Schools
Gale, Trevor; Tranter, Deborah – Critical Studies in Education, 2011
This article provides a synoptic account of historically changing conceptions and practices of social justice in Australian higher education policy. It maps the changes in this policy arena, beginning with the period following the Second World War and concluding with an analysis of the most recent policy proposals of the Bradley Review.…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Higher Education, Student Participation, Educational Policy
Edwards, Julie; Crosling, Glenda; Edwards, Ron – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2010
Education institutions worldwide have and continue to seek opportunities to spread their offerings abroad. While the provision of courses to students located overseas through partner institutions has many advantages, it raises questions about quality control that are not as applicable to other forms of international education. This paper uses a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, International Education, International Educational Exchange, Distance Education
Davis, Glyn – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2008
Australian public universities are hybrid public-private institutions. Though established and regulated by government, they have always enjoyed substantial academic autonomy and for most of their history raised some of their revenue privately. Both these aspects have become more marked over the last twenty years, with increased regulation of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Government School Relationship, Institutional Autonomy
Mok, Ka Ho; Xu, Xiaozhou – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2008
The economic transition in China since the late 1970s has led to not only drastic social transformations but also rapid advancements in science and technology, as well as the revolution in information and communications technology. In order to enhance the global competence of the Chinese population in coping with the challenges of a…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Privatization, Global Approach, Foreign Countries

Sciulli, Nick – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 1997
Examines trends in competitive tendering and contracting (i.e., outsourcing) in Australian universities and their implications for university administrators, using data from a survey of 29 institutions. Looks at institutional policies, costing methodologies, services contracted out, and reasons for contracting out services. Results indicate cost…
Descriptors: College Administration, Competition, Contracts, Economic Change
Martin, L. M. – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1993
Implications of two trends in Australian higher education are considered. These trends are shift to a fee-for-services system in which the government pays less of the cost of higher education; and move toward deregulation, with elimination of centralized planning and emphasis placed on institutional response to student demand. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Administration, Decentralization, Educational Economics, Federal Regulation
Pratt, Graham; Poole, David – Australian Universities' Review, 2000
Discusses the rise of entrepreneurialism in Australian universities as one response to globalization. Examines its positive and negative effects upon educational standards, academic morale, and structure of academic work. Highlights areas of fundamental change in the sector, including changes in university missions and culture and the uneven…
Descriptors: College Administration, Educational Finance, Educational Trends, Entrepreneurship

Brown, Lynton; And Others – Australian Journal of Education, 1996
Discusses the impact of the contractualist environment on education in Australia, focusing on what teachers perceive to be changing in education and in their professional practice. Also discusses some of the challenges of professional practice in an age of contractualism. (MDM)
Descriptors: Contracts, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Educational Practices
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