2009
DOI: 10.2304/eerj.2009.8.2.189
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European Higher Education Policy and the Formation of Entrepreneurial Students as Future European Citizens

Abstract: In this article, the author argues that European education policies and rhetoric are imbued with orthodoxy of agency and models of empowered, entrepreneurial actors, striving to surpass the limits of national boundaries. Free circulation of citizens has progressively underpinned a new construction of 'the European', who is entrepreneurial, flexible and mobile. Ideals and practices of mobility have been premised on two competing agendas: one that focuses on economic imperatives, and the other that relates to a … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 33 publications
(25 reference statements)
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“…The self-reliance of the individual is an important assumption of neo-liberal discourses (Fairclough 2001, 187). Peters (2001) and Papatsiba (2009) note that responsibilizing the individual for investing in one's own education, equipping oneself with personal skills and developing enterprise is part of the intensified moral regulation promoted via neoliberal welfare and educational policies, especially those relating to international education and student mobility. There is an expectation of ambition from students -(a) British education is best able to serve my ambition to be the best' (BCECS 1999).…”
Section: The Consequences and Promises Of The National Brandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The self-reliance of the individual is an important assumption of neo-liberal discourses (Fairclough 2001, 187). Peters (2001) and Papatsiba (2009) note that responsibilizing the individual for investing in one's own education, equipping oneself with personal skills and developing enterprise is part of the intensified moral regulation promoted via neoliberal welfare and educational policies, especially those relating to international education and student mobility. There is an expectation of ambition from students -(a) British education is best able to serve my ambition to be the best' (BCECS 1999).…”
Section: The Consequences and Promises Of The National Brandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To be sure, Erasmus serves several aims, such as strengthening participants' human capital and integrating the European labour market (Papatsiba, 2009). Moreover, the promotion of a European identity is not as important a policy goal of Erasmus as it used to be.…”
Section: Transnational Interactions and European Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The author claims that 'citizenship is a concept inherent to the idea of the university and the role of higher education' (p.177). The connection between the development of citizen's and student's identities is also implied by Papatsiba (2009) who claims that flexible and mobile citizens are formed through education mobility programs. Moreover, the construction of a European citizen through Bologna happens in opposition to the construction of 'the other'someone who is excluded and in relation to whom the European citizen should be competitive (Fejes, 2008).…”
Section: The Potential Of Bologna To Construct the Meaning Of Europementioning
confidence: 99%
“…One example of this is the EU versus geographical Europe dissonance. ‘Europe’ is very often used to denote the EU (Novoa and Lawn, 2002; Papatsiba, 2009). This is the case even though geographically Europe extends further to the east from the EU border, encompassing some non-EU countries such as Moldova, Ukraine, a small western part of Russia (Walters, 2009).…”
Section: Debates About Europementioning
confidence: 99%
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