Session Information
23 SES 02 C, Geopolitical Shifts, Freedom and Rising Nationalisms: the University in a new Spatio-temporal Era.
Symposium
Contribution
This paper examines changes in Russian higher education after the 2022 decision to withdraw from the Bologna process that Russia joined in 2003 (Leskina, 2021). The paper focuses on the waning of the internationalizing impact of the Bologna Process on Russian higher education, and the growing emphasis on local (Russian, Soviet) educational traditions. Debates about the future nature of higher education in the country proceed in the legislative assembly, the government, and the media. The paper delves into the responses of the Russian academic community to the decision and examines the issues that the academics bring up, and how. We address empirical questions such as how the representatives of the academic community frame Russian higher education vis-a-vis the 'others'? How do they place Russian higher education in relation to the other systems? How do they emphasize the 'national' character of the Russian system vs. the 'international' (Mäkinen, 2021)? Using frame analysis (Author et al 2023) we intend to access the collective framing of this key HE policy, and the ways in which geopolitical and neonationalist framings are (or are not) brought into the rationalisation of this otherwise unexpected and wide-ranging decision. In our prior research on the English language examination in Russian schools (Author et al, 2023) we have found that towards the end of the 2020’s negative aspects of the English language have started to dominate the public discussion. These included frames such as the following: common national identity and ‘traditional Russian’ moral values; curricula as a means of constructing uniformity and patriotism; the volume of the foreign language studies threatening the mastering of the Russian language; the risk of letting foreign stakeholders shape national education policy; ambition for more state control over teachers, curricula, and textbooks; less need for knowledge of foreign languages; growing incompatibility between certain educational policies and threats to the national interests of Russia; and importance of considering the national security strategy also in educational matters. We use these frames as a starting point in the analysis of the academic discussion. Theoretically, our discussion is framed by debates on (neo)nationalism and its manifestation in higher education (Douglass, 2021), (geo)politics of higher education (Moscovitz & Sabzalieva, 2023; Koch, 2014; Mäkinen, 2023) as well as the ambiguous role of academic personnel as enactors of education policy in an authoritarian educational context (Gataulina, 2024; Zavadskaya & Gerber, 2023).
References
Gataulina, I. (2024). De/re/composing authoritarian-neoliberal assemblages. Ethnography of Russian universities and beyond (doctoral dissertation). Tampere University. Koch, N. (2014). The shifting geopolitics of higher education: Inter/nationalizing elite universities in Kazakhstan, SaudiArabia, and beyond. Geoforum, 56, 46–54. Leskina, Natalia (2021). The Integration of Russia in the European Higher Education Area. Challenges and Opportunities. In Principled Pragmatism in Practice : The EU's Policy Towards Russia after Crimea, edited by Fabienne Bossuyt, and Elsuwege, Peter van, BRILL, ProQuest Ebook Central, https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/helsinki-ebooks/detail.action?docID=6539040. Moisio, S., & Kangas, A. (2016). Reterritorializing the global knowledge economy: An analysis of geopolitical assemblages of higher education. Global Networks, 16(3), 268-287. Moscovitz, H., & Sabzalieva, E. (2023). Conceptualising the new geopolitics of higher education. Globalisation, Societies and Education, 21(2), 149–165. https://doi.org/10.1080/14767724.2023.2166465 Mäkinen, Sirke. 2023. Introduction to Special Issue: Internationalization in challenging times: Practices and rationales of internal and external stakeholders. European Journal of Higher Education 13(2), 126-141. Mäkinen, S.(2021). Global university rankings and Russia's quest for national sovereignty, Comparative Education 57(3), 417-434. Piattoeva, N., Smirnova, V., & Santos, Í. (2023). The politics of language: The case of national examinations in English in Russia. European Educational Research Journal, 22(5), 666-682. Zavadskaya, M., & Gerber, T. (2023). Rise and fall: social science in Russia before and after the war. Post-Soviet Affairs, 39(1-2), 108-120.
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