Revisiting China’s Africa policies and educational promises: Towards a global convergence of development in the post-2015 era?

Tingting Yuan (2019): Revisiting China’s Africa policies and educational
promises: towards a global convergence of development in the post-2015 era?, Globalisation, Societies and Education, DOI: 10.1080/14767724.2019.1595534

Tingting-Yuan-(1)

Dr Tingting Yuan, Bath Spa University

Comparing China’s 2006 (Policy 1) and 2015 (Policy 2) Africa policies, this recently published article reveals how China’s political discourse has become more confident, practical, and depoliticised. In particular, this paper shows how education is allocated, promised, and embedded in China’s ‘shared’ agenda, which is centred on development co-operation and mutual learning.

The first part of this paper looks at the changing discourse of China’s African policies. It is found that, first, Policy 2 has a more determined and confident discourse. It  highlights the role of China in the current global political economy such as ‘the world’s second largest economy’ and ‘an active player in the current international system that has helped build it and contributed to it’, which was not emphasised in Policy 1. Policy 2 also provides a clearer argument regarding the need to sustain such a relationship and a plan for how to do so in the future. Moreover, Policy 2 underscores the common pursuit of development to realise both the ‘Chinese dream’ and ‘African dream’, thus creating a ‘shared future’.  Second, China plays the role of the ‘actor’ rather than ‘declarer’ in Policy 2. The policy provides more details on co-operation plans, particularly ‘economic and trade co-operation’, ‘development co-operation’, and ‘cultural and people-to-people co-operation’. In contrast, Policy 1 did not have a section on ‘development co-operation’. Policy 2 made far more promises regarding ‘development’. These promises are more technical, practical, and achievable than those only briefly outlined in Policy 1. From the foreign aid perspective, Policy 2 represents a more ‘professional’ attempt to create an effective policy, one with reduced political and ideological rhetoric. Although it has yet to follow the example of Western donors in terms of aid delivery and evaluation, China has switched to a more action-based approach to demonstrate its strengthened commitment to international development since Policy 1.

Based on this comparison, the paper continues to reveal a key feature of the current African policy and related Forum on China-African cooperation (FOCAC) action plans – development based on mutual learning. Knowledge, skills, and experience sharing are highlighted in China’s promise. Defined as a key factor in Human Resource Development (HRD), education inevitably plays a key role here. This greatly exceeds formal education. Despite being specifically stated in the sub-section on ‘cooperation in education and HRD’ in Policy 2, educational activities like experience exchange activities conducted by ‘academic institutions’ and ‘joint research centres’ in science and technology also appear in the other sub-sections. In terms of the educational co-operation approaches stated in the policies, there is a growing emphasis on tertiary education and vocational training. This includes an increasing number of Chinese government scholarships and the provision of training in the form of seminars and workshops. This also involves enhanced university co-operation including the involvement of the top ranked universities in China and Africa. Despite all of these progresses in education in terms of increased quantity as well as emphasised quality improvement, what may be distinctive in China’s educational promise? The paper argues that, it is not the allocation of education in development or social development discourse that is distinctive, but the rationale of embedding education and training as an essential aspect of two-way but independent development. Moreover, it is not China’s approach of providing ‘education’ that is distinctive, but the ‘experience’ shared through educational activities. Not simply an area of co-operation in China’s Africa policy, education is embedded in many places in China’s experience sharing agenda.

The last part of the paper reflects on China’s current position in the global political economy. It tries to answer the question asked in the beginning of the paper: is the rise of China is conforming to the dominant trends in international development today? It is argued that the revealed features represent China’s harmonised position in international development rather than a clear convergence. These features did not change the nature of China’s distinctiveness, which is partly rooted in its unique history. While China may show some similarity to the patterns or approaches of the West in terms of its aid discourse and practice, it does not show a similar position in terms of influencing or persuading others in the process of national and global development.

This paper concludes by highlighting two main points. First, China is trying to consolidate its position and be more active through an updated version of policy discourse that represents both the (a) current international agenda on development and poverty reduction; and (b) its own understanding on the foundation of international development—that is, the ‘shared’ past, present ,and future. This brings a wide range of educational activities to an essential place in order to achieve development through ‘learning from one another’. Second, China has a special position on education. However, while devoting increasing effort to educational aid and co-operation, it is not shaping education policies globally but focus is on self-enhancement and exchanging its ‘indigenous solution’ to economic development via education.

Neither the Washington Consensus which promotes a globalised neoliberalism, nor the Beijing consensus which is based on a pragmatic and flexible ‘Chinese socialist economy’, is globally accepted today. If convergence is defined as agreement on one specific model of development, then there remains no convergence in this matter. However, it can be concluded that, using a convergent approach and technique, China brings its experience and logic of development to the current international agenda at a time when the country’s distinctiveness is becoming increasingly recognised. It is thus important to recognise that every nation state can historicise and position itself in a unique way; a convergent model may not be as essential as a convergent attitude towards incorporating diverse voices and solutions in the realm of international development.

 

Author Bio

Dr Tingting Yuan is a Senior Lecturer in International Education at Bath Spa University. She was a lecturer at Liverpool Hope University from 2012 to 2016 after she gained her Ph.D. in the Graduate School of Education at the University of Bristol. Her doctoral research was on ‘Chinese educational aid to Africa’ which included a series of fieldwork undertaken in Tanzania and China. Her broader research interests include public goods and education, globalisation and education, international aid of education, China-Africa cooperation, and other educational issues related to the global political economy.

Understanding Educational Inequalities in a Transitional Era: The Surging Role of Culture Practice in Chinese Sociology of Education

Ailei Xie

Dr Ailei XIE, Guangzhou University, China

Research highlighted

Xie, Ailei, Kuang, Huan, Hong, Yanbi, and Liu Qunqun.(2018a) . Integrated cultural capital investment and social adjustment of urban and rural students in elite universities (in Chinese). Higher Education Research39(9), 30-36.

Xie, Ailei, Kuang, Huan, Hong, Yanbi, and Postiglione, Gerard A (2018b). Cultural capital deficiency as challenges: rural students in Elite universities (in Chinese). Peking University Education Review, 16(4), 45-64.

Xie, Ailei.(2016) . Rural Students in China’ Elite University: Social Mobility and Habitus Transformation” (in Chinese). Education Research16(4), 74-81.

 

In less than 40 years, China has become the world’s second largest economy. Encouraged by the link between schooling and a modern state, tremendous efforts have been made by the Chinese government to expand its school system. The higher education sector, for example, experienced an unprecedented growth since the end of the 1990s. The number of students has increased from less than 0.86 million in 1978, when the socialist country tried to reopen it to the outside world, to more than 27.53 million in 2017 (National Bureau of Statistics of China 2017). With its increasing capacity to serve more students, a key question is whether the education system has become more equal (Xie 2015a, 2015b). The literature produced in recent years suggest a patterned school success. While urban students still outperformed their counterparts from rural areas in term of access to quality schooling and universities, the changing fabric of the social structure gradually left those students with a lower socioeconomic status far behind (Postiglione 2015). In other words, the rural-urban gap is still there, and the rising socioeconomic differences among people are having their imprint on Chinese education system. The education opportunity structure is still changing but becomes increasingly clear, leaving more questions on how the new education opportunity structure becomes possible.

The market transition brings back the issue of capital and its role in social competition for privileges in education (Postiglione, 2015). Yet, the picture depicted by the literature is still unclear, which reveals the complexities in understanding a society that is in constant transformation. For example, economic capital is an important predictor for admission into first-tier universities. Yet, controlling the influence of family residence, father’s occupation as well as level of education, students from high income families are less likely than their counterparts from middle- and low-income families to gain access to higher education institutions (Chen 2015). Social capital helps for school success (Xie & Postiglione 2016; Xie 2016a). Yet, it works only partially for employment upon university graduation (Lai, Meng & Su 2012). Cultural capital helps in middle schools, but does not work out in universities, for academic performance (Zhu 2018). The complex picture of the roles played by varied forms of capital highlights the importance of understanding the social and cultural context by applying the concept capital developed in western contexts.

My publications over the past two years are inspired by the work of Bourdieu on cultural capital. The data used in each of the publications is from a mixed-methods ongoing longitudinal study of students at four elite, research intensive, public Project 985 universities (The Study of Elite Universities Student Experience, SEUSE) in China. The concept cultural capital itself has the potential to demystify the privileges in education that certain social groups (for example, the urban and middle class) have. As a new structure is arising, the ways those privileged social groups have in passing their advantages to their children are becoming more sophisticated. Yet, a misuse of it may tend to imply that the Chinese social structure is static, and a dominant culture have already gained its arbitrariness. Under such circumstances, some may assume that assimilation to mainstream culture can mean privileges, while rebellion can entail failures in schools. Yet, this is questionable. My paper published in Higher Education Research (Xie 2018a), for example, suggests a mixed practice in cultural capital investment, which I conceptualize as integrated cultural capital strategy. It suggests that the cultural practices of middle-class families in cities provide their children with advantages in social success in elite universities. Furthermore, their cultural practice is featured by their investment in both highbrow cultural activities participation (for example, visiting art museums, attending classical concerts and visiting theater plays) as well as trainings in helping children to gain such skills as singing, dancing and playing musical instruments. The trainings demonstrate a preference to low-brow cultural consumption. Yet, this, by no means, suggests a cultural omnivore among the emerging largest middle-class group (Sintas & Álvarez, 2002). Rather, it arises from the intensive status competitions among middle class parents who are influenced heavily by a neo-liberal discourse on individual responsibilities for their own success (Ball 2003). While there is not a clear pattern of dominant culture practice, anxious middle-class parents in cities tend to invest on anything that they think might bring privileges to their children. And, these cultural capital strategies are successfully translated into their children’s social success in elite universities. Rural students are left far behind in terms of social success, with their chances of being appointed/selected as leaders of important students’ bodies remaining low (Xie, 2018a).

Gaining insights from Lareau’s tradition in interpreting cultural capital as family strategies that align with schools’ institutional rewards, my paper in Peking University Education Review examines how the above-mentioned cultural practices bring privileges to urban students in China’s most elite universities (Xie 2018b). While the paper published on Higher Education Research is based on the quantitative data collected in SEUSE, this paper is based on both the quantitative and qualitative data. What the data analysis suggests is that the integrated cultural capital strategy is translated into urban students’ privileges in social success in two ways. First, it cultivates a sense of belongings and entitlement to elite universities among urban middle-class students. Second and more importantly, it helps them to build the confidence to succeed, a mixed effect of both highbrow cultural activities’ participation and long-term training in cultural skills. For those students from rural background, they could barely understand the importance of the social aspects of their university life upon coming to the elite milieu. What is even worse is that they feel “being socially incompetent”, a feeling caused by the lack of family investment in trainings of cultural skills in singing, dancing and playing musical instruments (Xie, 2018b).

What I suggest is that these micro-level analyses could not be fully understood without a knowledge on the macro-level changes. In a fast-changing society with a more dynamic social structure, different social groups are competing for the cultural hegemony by empowering their own cultural tastes, dispositions and practice into a more senior position. The anxious urban middle-class families are, to some extent, successful in imposing their values onto the whole society, including those vulnerable social groups from the rural communities. Their integrated social capital strategy is also rewarded by China’s elite universities. Yet, the strategy itself is still ambivalent, featured for its nature of half-breed between highbrow culture and lowbrow culture participations, reflecting a fierce status competition among the newly-made middle class families and the fear of falling from their privileged places. The new boundary setting up by the urban middle class shows another face of the rapid-changing Chinese society, and the gradual solidification of the social structure. Investment in cultural practices that is still unclear in its fabrics and has not yet fully gained its hegemony in the society demands not only tremendous efforts but also entails high risks for individuals. It produces new barriers for social groups that have long been marginalized.

At the collective level, cultural practices help in shaping and reinforcing group identities. They produce loyalties and shape group/class relationships to education (Reay 2017). The third paper I introduced was published in Education Research (Xie 2016b) and is further developed in a manuscript that is under review. It examines the rural’s relationship to education by looking at the habitus transformation of rural students in elite universities. From a Bourdieusian perspective, the rural students may come to the elite environment as cultural outsiders, which may suggest the importance of habitus transformation for academic and social success. The premise is that there is a hierarchical relationship between the home culture and dominant culture rewarded in an elite environment. The feeling that their home culture is inferior to the dominant culture brings a painful dislocation between an old and a newly developing identity and becomes barriers to integration at elite universities. Yet, my analysis of a small group of academically successful rural students’ interview data suggests two different types of integration outcomes for them in an elite environment: “habitus transformation” and “habitus hysteresis”. I argue that the reason is they start from a compartmentalized fitness between their original habitus and the elite milieu they enter (Xie 2016b). This again reveals the characteristics of a society in transition. The cultural practices of the urban middle class are gaining its dominant position, bringing advantages to their children: the habitus alignment between their home environment and the elite institution. Yet, its half-breed, evolving nature and not yet fully arbitrary position leave space for students from other backgrounds. For example, those rural students coming to an elite environment find their own cultural elements are partially aligned with that of the emerging middle class in cities (valuing education and highlighting hard work). Some of them take refuge in a sense of familiarity and hide from unfamiliar social challenges in the new elite milieu. In other words, the field conditions have changed but their habitus lags behind. Yet, full integration into universities guarantees more chances in the accumulation of social and cultural capital (Stuber 2011).

All of the three publications gain theoretical insights from the work of Bourdieu on cultural capital (Bourdieu 1984, 1986, 1988), as well as later studies by DiMaggio (1982, 1997, 2012) and Lareau (1988, 2000, 2002). They, however, examine its relevance by placing it in the specific social context of Chinese society which is in constant flux. By linking the macro-level analysis on the competition for arbitrariness of their own cultural practices by city middle class to micro-level competition for privileges in elite universities, these papers explore the possibilities of Bourdieu’s theoretical tradition in understanding a transitional society. The fabric of the social structure is becoming increasingly clear but not clear enough yet, and the competition for cultural arbitrariness is becoming more fierce. What this means deserve further exploration.

 

References:

 Ball, S. J. (2003). Class strategies and the education market: The middle classes and social advantage. New York, London: Routledge.

Bourdieu, P. (1984). Distinction: A social critique of the judgement of taste. London, England: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Bourdieu, P. (1986). The forms of capital. In J. Richardson (Ed.), Handbook of theory and research for the sociology of education (pp. 241–258). New York, NY: Greenwood.

Bourdieu, P. (1988). Homo academicus. Cambridge, England: Polity Press. Bourdieu, P. (1989). The state nobility. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.

Chen, X. (2015). Who Has More Opportunities to Attend College?—An Empirical Study of the Strata Distribution of Different Qualities of Higher Education Opportunities in China. Chinese Education & Society, 48(3), 201-217. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/10611932.2015.1085769. doi:10.1080/10611932.2015.1085769

DiMaggio, P. (1982). Cultural capital and school success: The impact of status culture participation on the grades of U.S. high school students. American Sociological Review, 47, 189–201. doi:10.2307/2094962.

DiMaggio, P. (1997). Culture and cognition. Annual Review of Sociology, 23, 263–287.

DiMaggio, P. (2012). Sociological perspectives on the face-face enactment of class distinction. In S. T. Fiske & H. R. Markus (Eds.), Facing social class: How societal ranks influences interaction (pp. 15–38). New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.

DiMaggio, P., & Mohr, J. (1985). Cultural capital, educational attainment, and martial selection. American Journal of Sociology, 90, 1231–1236. doi:10.1086/228209.

Lamont, M., & Lareau, A. (1988). Cultural capital: Allusions, gaps and glissandos in recent theoretical developments. Sociological Theory, 6, 153–168. doi:10.2307/202113

Lareau, A. (2000). Home advantage: Social class and parental intervention in elementary education. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. (Original work published 1989)

Lareau, A. (2002). Unequal childhoods: Class, race, and family life. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Postiglione, G. A. (2015). Education and social change in China: Inequality in a market economy. New York, London: Routledge.

Reay, Diane. (2017). Miseducation: Inequality, Education, and the Working Classes. Bristol: Policy Press.

Sintas, J., & Álvarez, E. (2002). Omnivores show up again: The segmentation of cultural consumers in Spanish social space. European Sociological Review, 18, 353–368. doi:10.1093/esr/18.3.353

Stuber, J. M. (2011). Inside the college gates: How class and culture matter in higher education. Lanham, MD:  Lexington Books.

Xie, A. (2015a). Inside the College Gate: Rural Students and Their Academic and Social Success. Chinese Education & Society, 48(2), 77-80. Retrieved from https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10611932.2015.1040672. doi:10.1080/10611932.2015.1040672

Xie, A. (2015b). Toward a More Equal Admission? Access in the Mass Higher Education Era. Chinese Education & Society, 48(3), 157-162. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1080/10611932.2015.1095614. doi:10.1080/10611932.2015.1095614

Xie, A. (2016). Family strategies, guanxi, and school success in Rural China. New York, London: Routledge.

Xie, A., & Postiglione, G. A. (2016). Guanxi and school success: An ethnographic inquiry of parental involvement in rural China. British journal of sociology of education, 37(7), 1014-1033.

 

Author Bio

Dr. Xie Ailei is Associate Professor and the Associate Dean of the Bay Area Education Policy Institute for Social Development at Guangzhou University. His main areas of research are on higher education and social justice, and rural education development in China. His publications examine the academic and social success of rural students in China’s most elite universities (Peking University Education Review, 2018; Higher Education Research, Educational Research, 2016); the value of rural parents on schooling (Peking University Education Review, 2017); how guanxi structures rural parents’ choices of school participation (British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2016); and access to China’s higher education (Chinese Education & Society, 2015) . The current research project that he is leading is on the social and academic experience of rural students in China’s elite universities. He has also been involved in studies on access to higher education institutions by the rural and ethnic minorities in Gansu. Dr. Xie Ailei gained his Ph.D degree in sociology of education from the University of Hong Kong. He was an Assistant Professor at Shanghai Jiao Tong University from the 2012 to 2013, a postdoctoral research fellow at the University of Hong Kong from 2014 to 2017, and was selected as a visiting fellow to Cambridge University in 2016. He can be reached at xieailei@gmail.com.

Dr. Xie Ailei currently serves as the associate editor of the journal Chinese Education & Society. He is also on the editorial advisory board of the Journal of Education Policy.

Dear Diary… Exploring Social Sciences Diary Method Research: Gender and Sexuality Focus

Date: Friday, 10th May 2019

Time: 11:30 (11:00 – 11:30 for registration) to 15:30 with refreshments and a networking lunch provided

Venue: R0.03 Ramphal Building, University of Warwick, UK

This one-day event, supported by the British Sociological Association, focuses on the use of diary research in sociologically-oriented social sciences research.

This event aims to raise the profile of diary research in sociology and the social sciences more broadly, with an emphasis on gender and sexuality research – there is no expectation that participants would be familiar with or using diary research, and the event is particularly envisaged as appealing to doctoral students who have not yet established their methodology.

This event will include an overview of diary method, and will also showcase a variety of types of diary research which have been used in different empirical settings. The event invites discussion of the potential – and the challenges – of diary method for social sciences research. All of the speakers have used diaries to research sociological concerns, including sexuality, gender and care.

Programme

•   Introducing Solicited Diaries as Method

 Professor Christine Milligan, Lancaster University

•   “I’m not saying that keeping the sex diary ruined my life but…” Private diaries: collecting fragments of sexual life

Dr Laura Harvey, University of Brighton

•   “I’m not really sure why I took that!” Exploring the everyday and the unexpected through photo-elicitation

Dr Michael Keenan, Nottingham Trent University

•   Capturing the minutiae of care: using diary method to research the conference experiences of academics with caring responsibilities

 Dr Emily F. Henderson, University of Warwick

•   Interactive session of providing and analyzing diary data

Chaired by Xuemeng Cao, Krystal Douglas, Sarah Staniforth, University of Warwick 

Further details and information on how to register can be found online at

https://www.britsoc.co.uk/events/key-bsa-events/bsa-postgraduate-regional-event-dear-diary-exploring-social-sciences-diary-method-research-gender-and-sexuality-focus/

Refreshments and lunch will be provided (dietary requirements can be catered for).

We would be grateful if you could disseminate this event within your department.

If you have any questions about this event, please contact:

Xuemeng Cao Xuemeng.Cao@warwick.ac.uk  

Call for Contributors – International Students in China (Chinese Edition)

This special issue focuses on international students in China. It contributes a critical Chinese perspective to the existing literature on international student experiences.

Authors are invited to submit full manuscripts written in simplified Chinese with abstracts in both Chinese and English (150-200 words) to two editors via Journal Submission Portal. Please submit Microsoft word documents.

作者请于截稿日期前将中文稿件全文及中英文摘要(150-200字)通过杂志投稿系统发至两者中文特刊主编。投稿只接受word文档。

国际学生杂志“中国留学生”特刊诚挚征稿

中国现在是继美国、英国之后的世界第三大留学目的地国家。与美英等世界传统留学目的地国家留学生的学习经历已经引起学术界广泛研究兴趣相比,学术界对来华留学生学习经历的研究还比较缺乏。

应ESCI期刊《国际学生杂志》(Journal of International Students)主编邀请,我们编辑出版该期刊的中文版特刊。该特刊将聚焦来华留学生,可以为现有国际留学生学习经历研究文献提供重要的中国视角。特刊现诚挚邀稿,稿件可以是针对我国不同地区、不同层次高校就读的来华留学生政策、实践和学习经历的实证研究论文、理论探讨和批判性反思文章。我们期望投稿人能够用批判的视角探索和讨论与来华留学生教育相关的问题。

该特刊文章将涵盖来华留学生教育领域以下的主题:

  • 国家政策和高校实践;
  • 课程国际化;
  • 学术动机、期望和满意度;
  • 教学法、师生互动和学习参与;
  • 社会接触、跨文化挑战和适应;
  • 身份认同:刻板印象和他者化;
  • 对外汉语教学与习得;
  • 其他相关问题。

稿件截止日期:2019630

作者请于截稿日期前将中文稿件全文及中英文摘要(150-200字)通过杂志投稿系统发至两者中文特刊主编。投稿只接受word文档。

如何通过杂志投稿系统投稿:

1在杂志投稿系统建立一个个人帐号,并使用用户名和密码登录。登录网址为:

http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions

2)当您投稿时,从下拉菜单中选择 “Special Issue – International Students in China”

投稿稿件可以是研究论文(4,000-5,000字),或者反思性的文章(1,500-2,000字)。对两类稿件类型的详细说明,请参阅《国际学生期刊(Journal of International Student)》的 “稿件类型”(Manuscript Types)要求(http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions)。

投稿稿件应包括中英文标题、中英文摘要(150-200字)和中英文关键字(3-5字),文内引用、页码、小节标题、表格、图和参考文献。稿件正文页边距2.54厘米(1英寸)、双倍行距、5号宋体字。投稿稿件正文不包含作者的任何可识别信息,但投稿人应同时提交标题页,并包含作者姓名、单位、联系方式,以及作者简介(50字内)。

 

中文特刊主编

田美(西安交通大学,temmytian@mail.xjtu.edu.cn)

陆根书(西安交通大学,gslu@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

2019-04-02

———————————————————————————————–

Guest Editors:

Dr. Mei Tian, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Dr. Genshu Lu, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Currently, China is ranked the third most popular destination for international students, following the United States and the United Kingdom. In contrast with the extensive research interest in the experiences of international students in traditional destination countries, there is a general lack of understanding regarding international student experiences in China.

This special issue focuses on international students in China. It contributes a critical Chinese perspective to existing literature on international student experiences. We welcome research articles, theoretical discussions and critical reflections on policies, practices and experiences of international students across geographically and educationally diverse contexts in China. We ask potential authors to adopt a critical, anti-essentialist point of view when exploring and discussing issues related to China and Chinese international student education.

Individual manuscripts may discuss the following topics:

  • National policies and institutional practices;
  • Internationalisation of the curriculum;
  • Academic motivations, expectations and levels of satisfaction;
  • Pedagogy, teacher-student interactions and learning engagement;
  • Social encounters, intercultural challenges and adaptation;
  • Identity: stereotypes and otherisation;
  • Learning and teaching the Chinese language as a foreign language;
  • And other relevant issues.

Submission deadline for full manuscripts: June 30th 2019

Authors are invited to submit full manuscripts written in simplified Chinese with abstracts in both Chinese and English (150-200 words) to two editors via Journal Submission Portal. Please submit Microsoft word documents.

How to submit to Journal Portal:

  • Create an account and login with your name and password http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions
  • Select “Special Issue – International Students in China” from the dropdown menu when you submit the paper for consideration in this special issue (see below).

The manuscript can be a research article (4,000-5,000 words), or an article of reflections (1,500-2,000 words). For further explanation of the two manuscript types, please refer to the “Manuscript Types” requirements of the Journal of International Students (http://ojed.org/index.php/jis/about/submissions).

Each manuscript should include both Chinese and English abstracts (150-200 words), Chinese and English keywords (3-5 words), in-text citations, pagination, headings, tables, figures, and a reference list. Manuscripts should be double-spaced with 2.54cm (1-inch) margins and use Size 5 Simsun Font. Manuscripts must not include any identifiable information of the manuscripts’ authors. A separate title page must be submitted which contains authors’ names, affiliation and contact information. Please send a short biodata of each author (50 words).

For questions and idea approval, please contact issue co-editors:

Dr. Mei Tian

Xi’an Jiaotong University

Shaanxi,  China

E-mail: temmytian@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

Dr. Genshu Lu

Xi’an Jiaotong University, China

Shaanxi,  China

E-mail: gslu@mail.xjtu.edu.cn

Call for Papers – Special Issue What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities

Guest editors: Dr Aneta Hayes, Dr Sylvie Lomer and Prof Marek Kwiek
The guest editors are delighted to invite paper proposals for a special issue, provisionally titled ‘What is an international student represented to be? Critical constructions from across Europe, ethical silences and future opportunities’. This special issue proposal has been initially accepted by COMPARE: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, and we are now working on the final version of the proposal. We are therefore calling for paper contributions, to be included in the special issue.
There is a wide acknowledgment that the reputational benefit of ‘highly internationalised’ universities (understood mainly, due to the influence of global rankings, as having high numbers of international students) comes at the cost of (mis-) representations of globally mobile learners. In Anglophone countries, international students have been found to be represented as people in educational deficits, economic objects and supplicants of the prestigious education system of the receiving country (e.g. Lomer, 2014; Hayes, 2017, Marginson, 2013). It has also been argued that such representations, evoked due to positions of assumed prestige of the Anglophone countries, have legitimised the logic of intellectual, social and political domination over foreign students in their education systems (e.g. Bilecen, 2013; Tran and Pham, 2015; Yu and Moskal, 2018).
Little is however known about what international students are represented to be in non-Anglophone countries. There is therefore an urgent need to establish what their representations are, especially at a time when more non-Anglophone countries in Europe enter the internationalisation competition (de Wit et al., 2015). We therefore invite paper contributions that will focus on (but are not limited to) the following questions:

a) what are national policy and institutional rationales behind ‘more energetic’ recruitment of international students in non-Anglophone European countries?
c) how may these rationales position and represent international students, and
d) what consequences specific representations of international students might have for their social and education inclusion?
Submissions
1. Abstracts of 250 words and full author details (name, position, institutional affiliations, email and telephone number) should be submitted via email to Aneta Hayes (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk) by 5 May 2019.
2. Contributors will be notified about the outcome of their submission by 25th May 2019.
For questions, please contact Aneta (a.m.hayes@keele.ac.uk).
We look forward to receiving your contribution.
Best wishes,
Aneta, Sylvie and Marek