With the increasing mobility of international students to the UK, the appropriate facilitation of their transition remains a critical issue in terms of higher education practice and research. Much existing research and practice is characterised by assimilationist approaches to transition where international students are seen to 'adapt to' and 'fit in' seemingly uniform host environments. This study however draws on the concept of 'academic hospitality' (Bennett, 2000;Phipps & Barnett, 2007) to develop a more nuanced stance which emphasises reciprocity between academic 'hosts' and 'guests'. The findings presented here emerge from semi-structured interviews with a diverse group of international students who spent their first year abroad at a well-established UK university. Elaborating on different experiences and forms of academic hospitality (i.e. material, virtual, epistemological, linguistic and touristic), the paper contributes to a refined theorisation of international student transition. It also offers valuable insights for academic practitioners and policy makers who seek sensible approaches to internationalisation.
Whilst research into the changing landscape of UK Higher Education (HE) has produced a burgeoning literature on 'internationalisation' and 'transnational student mobility' over the past few years, still fairly little is known about international students' experiences on their way to and through UK higher and further education. Frequently approaching inter-and transnational education as 'neutral' by-products of neoliberal globalisation, elitism and power flows, much HE policy and scholarly debate tends to operate with simplistic classifications of 'international students' and therefore fails to account for the multifaceted nature of students' aspirations, mobilities and life experiences. Drawing on the notion of 'resilience' and insights from the 'new mobilities paradigm', this paper envisages alternative student mobilities which run parallel or counter to the dominant flows of power, financial and human capital commonly associated with an emerging global knowledge economy. Engaging with 'resilient' biographies of social science students studying at three UK HE institutions, the paper challenges narrow student classification regimes and calls for a critical re-evaluation of the relationship between international student mobility and other contemporary forms of migration, displacement and diaspora.
Whilst the presence of international students from so-called 'developing' or 'newly industrialised' countries has become a ubiquitous phenomenon in European higher education, few scholars have explored the underlying postcolonial trajectories that facilitate student migration to many European countries today. In this article, we seek to narrow this gap by critically engaging with the postcolonial heritage of European higher education and the ways in which it informs much student migration in today's era of neoliberal globalisation. We propose a threefold approach to reading this postcolonial heritage of higher education which comprises its historical, epistemic, and experiential (or 'lived') dimensions. Whilst such an approach requires a close examination of existing postcolonial theory in higher education studies, we also draw on qualitative research with student migrants in Portugal and the UK to show how the postcolonial heritage of European higher education is negotiated in everyday contexts and may become constitutive of students' identity formations.
Although, historically, there have always been travellers crossing the Balkan Peninsula, Todorova (1994) notes that early travellers were usually heading for important centres such as Constantinople or Jerusalem, and considered South-East Europe as a peripheral place where people were just passing through. The region is only really discovered in the eighteenth century along with an increasing interest in the East. More organised forms of tourism appear at the beginning of the nineteenth century, emerging first around railway lines and thermal therapy resources, and then expanding towards the coastlines. A large part of these developments took place in Croatia and the ‘Dalmatian Riviera’, but other regions also experienced the arrival of visitors and the first organised trip in Bosnia was proposed by Thomas Cook & Sons in 1898
Despite the rise of 'child-friendly cities' internationally, and a growing interest in youth engagement in urban planning, the role of children and young people in culture-led regeneration and 'place making' schemes, remains under-researched. Notwithstanding the wealth of research into childhood and youth cultures, little is known about the ways in which the abstract (and perhaps predominantly 'adult') notions of 'culture' and 'place' are negotiated by younger citizens. Drawing on participative research with schools across Hull, the UK City of Culture 2017, this contribution explores children's and young people's understandings of culture and place within this cultural regeneration event.Although our findings suggest that the City of Culture designation has brought benefits to children and young people in a marginalised city, there is still much to be learned from their often personal and informal interpretations of 'place' and 'culture', as well as the role played by schools in this context.
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