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Globalisation of Higher Education

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GLOBALIZATION OF HIGHER EDUCATION- CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES.

Name of Author : Himani Gupta

Designation : Lecturer

Organization : Jagannath International Management School

Address : K-13 A Khirki Extention, Malviya Nagar, New Delhi-110017

E-mail ID : tinugupta76@yahoo.co.in

GLOBALIZATION OF HIGHER EDUCATION- CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES.

Abstract

The term ‘globalization’ means integration of economies and societies through cross

country flow of information, ideas, technologies, goods, services, capital, finance and

people. Globalization is a process, …show more content…

At one extreme, globalization is seen as an irresistible and benign force

for delivering economic prosperity to people throughout the world. At the other, it is blamed as a

source of all contemporary ills.

However, while the theory of globalization is relatively new, the process is not. Roberson (1992)

further states that globalization was initially discussed from economic perspectives, but soon

after it became a topic for discussions among intellectuals from cultural perspectives as well.

According to Giddens “Globalization the dialectic of homogenization and heterogenization”

(1991. p22). In other words, globalization, by intensifying the interconnectedness among

different people, things and ideas, homogenizes the world and yet at the same time, the world

becomes heterogenized as people are more aware of differences due to the increasing proximity

with differences under a globalize world (Giddens, 1991 ).

The notion of the world community being transformed into a global village, as introduced in

1960 by Marshall Mc Luhan in an influential book about her newly shared experience of mass

media, was likely to be the first expression of the contemporary concept of globalization. (Cited

in Epstein, 2002). After 1980, accounts of globalization focused on a professed tendency of

societies to converge in becoming modern, described initially by Clark Kerr and colleagues as

the emergence of industrial man (cited in Robertson, 1992).

One critical issue

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