Internationalisation in Higher Education for Society
Xenophobia, radicalisation, anti-intellectualism, hate speech, populism, globalisation of the labour market, environmental change, global warming… These are only some of the major issues facing societies today. Related topics are the rise of the ultra-right, the Brexit crisis, the retreat to nationalism and trade wars, continued inequalities worldwide, and floods, droughts and other impacts of climate change.
All are of both social and academic concern and are vigorously debated across digital, social and traditional print media as well as in academic literature and in universities around the world. This is not surprising given their real and potential economic and social impact.
Meanwhile contemporary approaches to internationalisation are focused primarily on debate and discussion of these topics within the academy. While community outreach, social responsibility, social engagement and concepts such as service learning have been present in higher education for decades and in all regions of the globe, internationalisation activities have been largely concentrated on the higher education community.
The social responsibility component of internationalisation has, to date, rarely been the focus of systemic thinking, conceptualisation or strategy in the broad agenda of the internationalisation of higher education. This imbalance needs to be addressed because universities also have a contract with and an obligation to wider society.
Limited social engagement in internationalisation
Outreach, social responsibility and engagement are an increasing focus in Europe, notes a recent mapping report of the European Union-funded project TEFCE – Towards a European Framework for Community Engagement of Higher Education.
They increasingly involve all activities of a higher education institution (research, and teaching and learning), and all actors (academics, staff, leadership, students and alumni), but compete with internationalisation.
The TEFCE report notes: “In the absence of prioritising engagement over research excellence and internationalisation [author’s emphasis], many universities have failed to develop the appropriate infrastructures to translate the knowledge they produce into the range of contexts…”
So instead of considering internationalisation as one tool to support social engagement and responsibility – locally, nationally and globally – it is seen as a concept that draws resources, focus and infrastructure away from social engagement.
Other European or EU-funded projects such as ESPRIT are focusing on social engagement, but it is only in one (EUniverCities) that we have found a clear indication that internationalisation is seen as a valuable instrument to achieve social goals.
Even the 2017 European Commission communication “A Renewed Agenda for Higher Education”, while emphasising the relevance of social engagement, with a whole section devoted to it, does not elaborate on the power inherent in its main tool for internationalisation (Erasmus+) to tackle societal issues addressed in the agenda.
The Erasmus project that carved out a special section on internationalisation with regard to social engagement was the IMPI project which, in its toolbox, defines the fifth goal for internationalisation as being to “provide service to society and community social engagement” and even suggested 109 indicators for this area.
However, a study showed that only 18.5% of more than 800 users chose any indicators under this goal and in the newest EAIE Barometer only 11% of higher education institutions consider it a goal of internationalisation and a meagre 5% prioritise it.
This is despite the fact that the impact study of the European Voluntary Service (whose grantees are students in 61% of cases) showed substantial impact of volunteering abroad for local communities, including student attitudes towards Europe, intercultural learning, awareness of the value of volunteering, developing capacities in local communities and helping to develop civil society.
Making a meaningful contribution to society
This failure to link internationalisation to societal issues is even more surprising given that the updated definition of internationalisation in the European Parliament study of 2015 makes explicit reference to the need for internationalisation to “make a meaningful contribution to society”.
Is the situation different in other parts of the world? There is evidence to suggest that social engagement is a stronger component of the mission of higher education in Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia (for example, Malaysia).
The international network of universities the Talloires Network is active all over the world, working on strengthening the civic roles and social responsibilities of higher education. There are other examples. We conclude that social engagement is more present in policies, missions and processes of universities in emerging and developing regions than in Europe.
Limiting internationalisation to the higher education community anywhere in the world is to miss its tremendous opportunities. Our global society and environment are seriously endangered and internationalisation has immense potential to help solve major social issues of relevance locally and globally.
But that needs more than a few individual approaches scattered across the world. It needs a systematic understanding of the role of internationalisation beyond the walls of higher education. Hence, we suggest it is time to emphasise the need for a stronger focus on “Internationalisation in Higher Education for Society”, as stressed in the 2015 definition of internationalisation.
Firstly, this needs to be seen as the bridge between the concept of internationalisation in higher education and university social responsibility or university social engagement. Internationalisation activities as well as general social outreach activities have the goal of augmenting higher education competences and improving society, and internationalisation can be an accelerator for this.
We need a more systematic approach, though, that leverages existing and new internationalisation activities to tackle local and global social issues – including those emphasised in the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations – through social engagement.
Underused potential
The potential is undoubtedly there. Vast numbers of returning outbound as well as inbound students, academic and support staff can not only help to internationalise and ‘inter-culturalise’ the home campus, but – more importantly – can also engage with the wider public in the city, region and country.
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