University autonomy and its governance in European Higher Education: Impact on the rise of English as a Medium of Instruction
Waterloo Bridge Wing, Franklin Wilkins Building, Waterloo Campus, London
This meeting will take place in person in WBW LG/11. An online meeting link is available for those who cannot attend in person.
In recent decades, much of Europe has seen a trend towards neoliberal governance of public higher education, rooted in autonomy reforms and the implementation of steering-at-a distance mechanisms. Nominally autonomous, universities are nevertheless subject to incentivisation (or penalisation) to align with macro-systemic strategy of state — whether more stringently through funding models with performance-based indicators, or more loosely through the normative pressures of steering conversations embedded within governance practices. This movement coincides with a language shift of immense proportions towards more and more English within the higher education curriculum of unrelated subjects in non-anglophone countries. Often simplistically attributed to internationalisation or neoliberalism as defined in somewhat abstract and ideologically motivated terms, here we critically engage with the findings of the UKRI-funded ELEMENTAL project at the Open University, which applied a process tracing methodology to investigate the rise of English as a medium of instruction (EMI) through the practices of neoliberal governance, interviewing key stakeholders in university and ministerial governance in European countries. While considering also other countries within the remit of the project, the presentation will focus primarily on the Netherlands, Austria, and Spain. It aims to open up discussion more widely on the role of autonomy and steering-at-a-distances practices in democratised systems of governance and any need to counterbalance perceived inequalities through language management.
About the speaker
Marion Nao is an applied and sociolinguist, whose work draws on diverse and combined analytic approaches to discourse and social life, which she has applied to systemic contexts of education and healthcare. She is currently a Research Associate in the Centre for Language, Discourse and Communication at King's and an Honorary Associate in the Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies at the Open University, UK.
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