Volume 12, Issue 2 (2021)


Global Inequality and Widening Global Access in Cross-Border and Transnational Higher Education:

The Case of the Global Studies Programme 2002-2013
Alexander Lenger and Florian Schumacher
Transnational study programs and international mobility in higher education are rising. Recently, new forms of widening access and improving participation are being discussed on the national level. All the actions taken are expected to impact positively on underrepresented and disadvantaged groups in higher education, particularly for prospective students from lower socio-economic strata, under-represented gender or ethnic groups, disabled people, mature students and care givers, etc. On the international level, this debate on participation and access seems to be less marked. However, an analysis of the social dimension of widening global access has to consider not only national and international class barriers but also the gender, age, language and regional background of students. By analyzing the grades of 320 students enrolled in the Global Studies Programme between 2002 and 2013, a jointly operated transnational social science master's program located in Argentina, Germany, India, South Africa, and Thailand, this article provides empirical evidence that global inequality might be reproduced within such a transnational educational setting as well. In summary, we do not nd signi cant correlations between gender and grading, age and grading or language and grading. However, a strong and signi cant correlation between provenance and grades can be found. Our findings can be interpreted as additional ndings for the existence of a Northern-dominated higher education system, even amid cooperation with the Global South.

The Meritocracy of International Class Formation
Francisco Javier Ardila Suarez
Education enjoys the reputation of being one of the main tools for enabling social mobility. The rise in popularity of meritocracy, the capability approach and equality of opportunity, among others, have further reinforced the idea that social mobility is attainable and is determined by personal effort given a fair set of consequences. This perspective contrasts with the observed role of education in social reproduction by sociologist like Pierre Bourdieu. This paper presents a case study to test the role of education as a tool for social mobility in an international master program by using the method of Jodhka, Rehbein and Souza (2014). The findings do not support the argument of social mobility and instead present education as playing a role in social reproduction.

Internationalization Efforts at a German University: A Case Study on How International Students are Engaged in a Meaningful Way as Cultural Resources
Jennifer Ingeson
This study used a single-case study design and a qualitative research strategy to examine the manner in which international students were being engaged as contributors towards internationalization efforts at a German research university in a global city. The data suggests that international students are marginally being engaged as cultural resources mainly through mentoring programs and that several contextual barriers were hindering the interaction between international and German students. The study identified that opportunities for meaningful engagement between international and German students should be expanded to reach a wider audience while programs that are designed for international students should include the integration of more German students to avoid reinforcing student bubbles. This study proposes a framework to overcome contextual barriers that allows for internationalization for all through the meaningful integration of students and to motivate the university to recognize the benefits of utilizing international students as contributors towards internationalization efforts.

Secondary School Choice in Chile and South Africa: A Literature Review on the Orientations and Determinants of Families' Decision-making Processes in Highly Unequal and Segregated Contexts
Ximena Rubio Vargas
Chile and South Africa introduced school choice policies as explicit efforts to create and expand educational opportunities within a market-oriented school system. This article analyses secondary school choice processes from a demand-side perspective, based on a literature review of qualitative research published during ten years (2008-2017). Additionally, the article exposes the assumptions behind the policy model regarding the chooser profile and the rationality of decision-making processes. Patterns of school choice are based on class, place of residence, race, nationality, and gender. Different social groups try to access the most valued capital in society according to their means. School choice is thus not only a struggle for the acquisition of cultural capital, but it is also a battle for symbolic capital. Specific variations in school circuits at the secondary level suggest processes of increasing segregation and intra-class divisions, as well as a unification of previously separated groups. Furthermore, the differences in which preferences of school choice are shaped in Chile and in South Africa underline the divergent entrenchment of market orientations. Although in both cases market devices, such as school choice, were successfully introduced, the legitimation of their functioning works differently according to their historical policy development, institutional arrangement, and socio-economic transformation.

Remote Connectedness and Meaningless Knowledge: Of Resonance and Alienation in the Phenomenology of a Digital Global Studies Programme
Daniel Stich
Through a short literature review and by making use of Heidegger's phenomenological approach and Rosa's theory of resonance in an extensive analysis of semi-structured interviews with students in or close to the Global Studies Programme (GSP), held during the years 2020 and 2021 under pandemic related restrictions, this paper sheds light on opportunities, constrains and particular traits of a digital environment setting in an international and cultural setting and elaborates that a digital study environment was perceived as successful, inspiring and meaningful if interactive relations were fostered; if students heard and felt heard or self-efficient. In this sense, whether or not students met each other physically determined their senses of belonging, their comfort with each other and the success of a digital GSP. Then, students were able to exit their formal roles of being a student in a seminar to which the digital setting tended to reduce them and where inspirational moments could have been rare. It was in such perceived collective moments that knowledge creation and studying was experienced as meaningful, even in a digital setting although alienation was expressed by all interviewees and mutual approachability or equality remained illusive.