With particular, although not exclusive, reference to England, this article explores the appropriateness of describing higher education as a system. It has two main purposes: to explore the grounds for labelling English higher education as a system and to argue that, because this is no longer an appropriate label, a different conceptualisation is required. The central argument is that the structure of higher education is formed through the interaction of the state, market and higher education institutions and is, therefore, a shifting political construct. Furthermore, it will be hypothesised that the English (indeed, the British) model of higher education is better described as an increasingly internally differentiated network of sectors ra...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
We are entering uncharted waters within the world of higher education (HE) in the UK. Recent changes...
The aim of this article is to analyse the evolution of the British model of higher education...
With particular, although not exclusive, reference to England, this article explores the appropriate...
The possibility—and potential pitfalls—of an “Americanization” of European higher education are wide...
College-based Higher Education in England: Who is it for? What is it for? College-based higher educ...
Throughout the twentieth century and the first decades of the twenty-first century, the UK higher ed...
This article examines a series of well-documented changes in post-war English higher education: the ...
Before the effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic, there had been continued debate about the future of Hig...
This article examines the legitimacy of the US as a viable source for higher education policy ideas....
This book traces the development of a fully marketised higher education system in England over a 30-...
Before the effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic, there had been continued debate about the future of Hig...
The purposes and impact of higher education on the economy and the broader society have been transfo...
In this discourse the researcher tried to make the readers view the three-dimensional image of the ...
This article examines the ways in which a high-quality system of undergraduate education is represen...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
We are entering uncharted waters within the world of higher education (HE) in the UK. Recent changes...
The aim of this article is to analyse the evolution of the British model of higher education...
With particular, although not exclusive, reference to England, this article explores the appropriate...
The possibility—and potential pitfalls—of an “Americanization” of European higher education are wide...
College-based Higher Education in England: Who is it for? What is it for? College-based higher educ...
Throughout the twentieth century and the first decades of the twenty-first century, the UK higher ed...
This article examines a series of well-documented changes in post-war English higher education: the ...
Before the effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic, there had been continued debate about the future of Hig...
This article examines the legitimacy of the US as a viable source for higher education policy ideas....
This book traces the development of a fully marketised higher education system in England over a 30-...
Before the effect of the COVID-19 Pandemic, there had been continued debate about the future of Hig...
The purposes and impact of higher education on the economy and the broader society have been transfo...
In this discourse the researcher tried to make the readers view the three-dimensional image of the ...
This article examines the ways in which a high-quality system of undergraduate education is represen...
Higher education has been subject to a gradual process of marketisation since the early 1980s. This ...
We are entering uncharted waters within the world of higher education (HE) in the UK. Recent changes...
The aim of this article is to analyse the evolution of the British model of higher education...