Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/63239
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Type: Journal article
Title: Learning by the market: regulatory regionalism, Bologna, and accountability communities
Author: Jayasuriya, K.
Citation: Globalization Societies and Education, 2010; 8(1):7-22
Publisher: Routledge
Issue Date: 2010
ISSN: 1476-7724
1476-7732
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Kanishka Jayasuriya
Abstract: Over the last two decades institutions of higher education have been subject to new modes of regulatory governance. This essay applies a 'regulatory lens' to higher education governance with a view to understanding the sometimes contradictory relationship between the globalisation and regionalisation of higher education and the transformation of the public university. We use the Bologna Process to examine how new regional modes of higher education regulation are creating new forms of 'publicness' that are reshaping the scope, nature and form of public universities. The question posed is: What is the nature of the public good - and the public - in these new regulatory modes of higher education governance? Here, the concept of accountability communities is used to examine the way in which legitimacy is shaped, created and contested within these new modes of governance. Legitimacy secured through accountability communities facilitates membership of a functionally specific regulatory regime as well as the identification and location of public authority.
Keywords: regulatory regionalism
accountability
Bologna Process
regulation
public university
knowledge economies
Rights: © 2010 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.1080/14767720903574009
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14767720903574009
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Politics publications

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