In this book we set out to explore the prospects for equality of opportunity in an English higher education policy context which has been steered towards marketisation. In our introductory chapter we set out three questions which we and the other contributors to this book have addressed in different ways: • What features of marketisation are most evident in higher education? • How does institutional differentiation impact on higher education institutions, staff and students? • By what means are policies, practices and discourses of marketisation and differentiation in higher education reconciled with those of equality of opportunity? We have attempted a multi-level analysis of the impact of marketisation, focusing initially on the inter...
Further and higher education have witnessed something of a paradigm shift in recent years. This arti...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
This article considers notions of the market in UK higher education. It is argued that the economic ...
This book traces the development of a fully marketised higher education system in England over a 30-...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
Dimensions of Marketisation in Higher Education is a critical analysis of the various dimensions of ...
Marketing and marketisation are not the same. However, it is not a simple task to disentangle one fr...
This paper analyses higher education reform in relation to the ‘knowledge’ society and recent po...
This chapter provides the context for understanding higher education marketisation, differentiation,...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
Rankings and online comparison sites have both facilitated and shaped the marketisation of higher ed...
The restructuring of higher education (HE) according to neoliberal market principles has constructed...
This chapter describes changing state and sector policy in relation to differentiation and how it ha...
The marketisation of higher education is a growing worldwide trend. Increasingly, market steering is...
The English sector is characterised by an expanding and increasingly differentiated set of higher ed...
Further and higher education have witnessed something of a paradigm shift in recent years. This arti...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
This article considers notions of the market in UK higher education. It is argued that the economic ...
This book traces the development of a fully marketised higher education system in England over a 30-...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
Dimensions of Marketisation in Higher Education is a critical analysis of the various dimensions of ...
Marketing and marketisation are not the same. However, it is not a simple task to disentangle one fr...
This paper analyses higher education reform in relation to the ‘knowledge’ society and recent po...
This chapter provides the context for understanding higher education marketisation, differentiation,...
This chapter presents an alternative view of marketised higher education form much of this volume: n...
Rankings and online comparison sites have both facilitated and shaped the marketisation of higher ed...
The restructuring of higher education (HE) according to neoliberal market principles has constructed...
This chapter describes changing state and sector policy in relation to differentiation and how it ha...
The marketisation of higher education is a growing worldwide trend. Increasingly, market steering is...
The English sector is characterised by an expanding and increasingly differentiated set of higher ed...
Further and higher education have witnessed something of a paradigm shift in recent years. This arti...
Both ‗marketing‘ and ‗marketisation‘ are features of the UK Higher Education (HE) sector. Whilst the...
This article considers notions of the market in UK higher education. It is argued that the economic ...