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Method 1. purpose of inquiry rules concepts; concepts don't rule inquirypurpose of inquiry is explanatory not policy normativepublic and private attributes in higher education are not fixed or natural: policy sensitive, historically relative, culture-boundpublic/private are not universal attributes so whole systems or institutions are one or other: mostly higher education is mixedwhat matters is the social and economic effects or outcomes of education, which can be either public goods or pr9459
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1. doing somersaults in Enschede rethinking and inverting public/private in higher education
amid the winds of globalisation
Simon Marginson
CHER 17-19 September 2004
2. Method 1
purpose of inquiry rules concepts; concepts don’t rule inquiry
purpose of inquiry is explanatory not policy normative
public and private attributes in higher education are not fixed or natural: policy sensitive, historically relative, culture-bound
public/private are not universal attributes so whole systems or institutions are one or other: mostly higher education is mixed
what matters is the social and economic effects or outcomes of education, which can be either public goods or private goods
3. Method 2
distinguish question of ownership (state/ non-state) from question of outcomes or goods produced (public/private)
public/private template not same as state/market template
public goods are heterogeneous to private goods, not the aggregation of private goods (social not reducible to individual)
public/private goods not mutually exclusive dual, but inter-penetrated, providing conditions for each other
public/ private goods not always zero-sum, can be positive-sum
4. Method 3
above all - we need a concept of public/private that works consistently across both national and global dimensions
5. classic definition of public goods non-rivalrous: consumed by any number of people without being depleted (e.g. mathematical knowledge)
non-excludable: the benefits cannot be confined to individual buyers (e.g. social tolerance)
6. includes externalities or ‘spillovers’: positive effects of individual higher education not fully captured by the student (e.g. improved productivity of workmates)
collective goods: not captured by individuals (e.g. social peace, more diverse cultural exchange)
7. problems of traditional approaches to public/private neo-classical economics: naturalises public/private, biased to private side
statism: underestimates potential of markets and civil society
both: neglect global, especially public goods
8. definition of public goods in higher education goods with a significant element of non-rivalry and/or non-excludability and
goods that are made broadly available across populations
9. examples of public/private goods in higher education private goods: student places that confer individual advantage (‘human capital’), personal cultural capital
public goods: knowledge, social literacy, collective cultural formation, systems of recognition, etc.
10. somersault 1:inverting public/private In national higher education systems, higher education is not overwhelmingly public in character. Regardless of formal ownership or fee systems, a substantial part of the goods it produces are private goods
11. somersault 2:inverting private/public In national higher education systems, higher education is not overwhelmingly private in character. Regardless of formal ownership or fee systems, a substantial part of the goods it produces are public goods
12. global private goods in higher education foreign degrees: acquired across borders and often used globally
cross-border transfer and adaptation of commercial knowledge
13. global public goods goods that have a significant element of non-rivalry and/or non-excludability and are made broadly available across populations on a global scale
‘whether – and how - global public goods are provided determines whether globalisation is an opportunity or a threat’ (Kaul et al. 2003, p. 2)
14. global public goods in higher education extensive and intensive cross-border networking creates scope for externalities in particular nations
both global goods, and global ‘bads’ (e.g. brain drain, cultural subversion by foreign influences) are produced
academic knowledge and the systems for circulating and codifying it are probably the most important global goods created in higher education (again note cultural asymmetries)
cross-cultural encounters and exchanges, including linkages to strangers (‘bridging’ associations)
international understanding and tolerance
infrastructures and resources that assist production and trade, government, the development of ideas and images, etc.
systems and protocols in higher education for recognition, etc that facilitate people mobility (and hence migration)
but global public goods are under-recognised: there is a ‘discrepancy between a globalised world and national, separate units of policy-making’ (Kaul et al. 1999, p. xxvi).
15. somersault 3:inverting private/public In the global environment, higher education involves not just production of private goods in a trading environment, but the production of significant public goods. We need an inter-governmental space in which global educational goods are recognised and facilitated
16. somersault 4:inverting public/private In addition to national governments and international agencies, global negotiations on global public goods in higher education should also take in civil agents, including NGOs, autonomous higher education institutions, disciplinary communities, and professions –
and also the relevant market actors, given that their production of private goods can also create public goods
17. conclusions we need tools for measuring and judging cross-border externalities and global collective goods in higher education
we need national policy units specifically focused on these elements
we need inter-governmental spaces at the global level focused on higher education
global agencies have a key potential
we need to enhance global access to goods already available, such as research
18. whether – and how - global public goods are provided determines whether globalisation is an opportunity or a threat