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Metin, Furkan – Research in Educational Administration & Leadership, 2023
Globalisation of labour has led to the migration of skilled workforce; known as 'brain drain'. To our knowledge, this paper is the first study which analyses brain drain from Türkiye through administrative register evidence of non-return bachelors' degree graduates. The analysis micro dataset in the paper is based completely upon administrative…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Undergraduate Students
Lanko, Dmitry – Journal of Studies in International Education, 2022
The emigration of skilled and able workers from Russia markedly increased in the last five years, prompting Russian scholars to reassess the phenomenon of brain drain, its definition, scope, consequences and causes. This article finds that the perceived connection between increasing 'brain drain' from Russia and the internationalization of higher…
Descriptors: Immigration, Brain Drain, College Faculty, International Education
Cerna, Lucie; Chou, Meng-Hsuan – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2023
Taking the migration-higher education nexus as an analytical entry point, we address the question: How can we account for different internationalisation outcomes? We focus on three actors involved in the global race to internationalise higher education activities: higher education institutions (HEIs), states, and migrants. We argue that the…
Descriptors: International Education, Higher Education, Outcomes of Education, Strategic Planning
Javed, Bushra; Zainab, Bibi; Zakai, Samia Nadeem; Malik, Shahzeb – Journal of Education and Educational Development, 2019
International Student Mobility (ISM) is progressively becoming a significant aspect of the higher education scenario. The universal higher education milieu has undergone a tremendous change due to ISM as the number of students going abroad for higher education is growing incessantly with every passing year. Pakistan is a developing country that…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Study Abroad, Developing Nations, Foreign Countries
Nghia, Tran Le Huu – Journal of International Students, 2019
This article reports a study that investigated prospective and current Vietnamese international students' motivations to study abroad and their immigration intentions. Analyses of 55 intercept interviews and 313 responses to a survey revealed 12 push and pull factors that motivated students to pursue overseas studies and 18 sociocultural,…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Study Abroad, Immigration, Vietnamese People
Metcalfe, Amy Scott – Critical Studies in Education, 2017
Transnational academic mobility is often characterized in relation to terms such as "brain drain", "brain gain", or "brain circulation"--terms that isolate researchers' minds from their bodies, while saying nothing about their political identities as foreign nationals. In this paper, I explore the possibilities of a…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, International Education, Political Attitudes, Foreign Nationals
Verkhohlyad, Olga; McLean, Gary N. – European Journal of Training and Development, 2012
Purpose: This study aims to bring some additional insight into the issue of emigration by establishing a relationship between emigration and psychic return of citizens to their human capital investment in the country. Design/methodology/approach: The article adopts a quantitative research strategy. It applies organizational commitment and human…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Immigration, Human Capital, Access to Education
Lien, Donald; Wang, Yaqin – Education Economics, 2012
We examine the effects of a branch campus on the social welfare of the host country and the foreign university. Overall, we find that a branch campus increases both the domestic social welfare (measured by the aggregate student utility) and the tuition revenue of the foreign university. The effect of a branch campus on the brain drain is…
Descriptors: Multicampus Colleges, Brain Drain, Study Abroad, Social Influences
Erokhina, K. S. – Russian Education and Society, 2009
The present era is characterized by scientists' high level of mobility, which is due to the characteristics of science work and its dynamic nature. Scientific activity knows no boundaries, and mobility is a vital factor of the mutual cultural and professional enrichment of scientific communities. The international migration of scientists is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientists, Scientific Research, Competition
Brown, Phillip; Tannock, Stuart – Journal of Education Policy, 2009
Talk of the rise of a global war for talent and emergence of a new global meritocracy has spread from the literature on human resource management to shape nation-state discourse on managed migration and immigration reform. This article examines the implications that the global war for talent have for education policy. Given that this talent war is…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Justice, Social Justice, Sociology
Gribble, Cate – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2008
A consequence of the dramatic rise in international student mobility is the trend for international students to remain in the country in which they study after graduation. Countries such as Australia, the UK and Canada stand to benefit from international student migration, as they are able to fill skill shortages with locally trained foreign…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Technology Transfer, Foreign Countries, Student Mobility
Vinokur, Annie – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2006
The "brain drain/brain gain" debate has been going on for the past 40 years, with irresolvable theoretical disputes and unenforceable policy recommendations that economists commonly ascribe to the lack of reliable empirical data. The recent report of the World Bank, "International migration, remittances and the brain drain", documents the…
Descriptors: Skilled Workers, Migration Patterns, Immigration, Brain Drain

Tansel, Aysit; Gungor, Nil Demet – Career Development International, 2003
An Internet survey of Turkish students studying abroad received 1,103 responses. Although 53% initially intended to return, only 13.5% have that intention currently. Reasons for staying abroad include better career prospects, Turkish economic conditions, lack of relevant work in Turkey, and avoidance of compulsory military service. (Contains 28…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, College Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Appleton, Simon; Sives, Amanda; Morgan, W. John – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2006
Whilst the migration of teachers has been a phenomenon for hundreds of years, the advent of "globalisation" has seen such migration return to prominence. This article focuses on the experiences of two developing countries in Southern Africa which have been on different ends of the process: South Africa as a net sender of teachers and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Developing Nations, Faculty Mobility, Brain Drain
Mihailescu, Ioan – Higher Education in Europe, 2004
The political changes in Romania after 1989 were followed by structural changes that affected all areas of social, economic, political, and cultural life. The transition from a 'closed' to an 'open' society has been difficult for East European countries, as the creation of institutions oriented towards competition and diversity has not led to an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Policy, Higher Education, Brain Drain
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