Research Output
Democracy and international higher education in China
  There is substantial evidence that supports the theory that higher education and democracy are highly correlated. Throughout modern history, students have been at the forefront of democratic movements, including the 1989 pro-democracy uprising in China. Since then, and despite the increased availability of Western-style education within and without its borders, China has bucked the trend. Using system justification theory as its theoretical framework, this study investigates why a Western-style education in China has done little to inculcate revolutionary movements. Findings indicate that a Western-style education does not facilitate student desire for democratisation in China because of the control imposed on student behaviour by Chinese authorities, including student subscription to Chinese Communist Party-endorsed notions of national pride and student ambition for postgraduate socioeconomic reward. Culturally grounded notions of social harmony were less evident than might have been expected.

  • Type:

    Article

  • Date:

    10 November 2014

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • ISSN:

    0818-8068

  • Funders:

    UK-India Education and Research Initiative

Citation

Onsman, A., & Cameron, J. (2014). Democracy and international higher education in China. Australian Universities' Review, 56(2), 4-13

Authors

Keywords

higher education, democracy, China, internationalisation, UK universities, social justification theory,

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