Governing Through Standards: The Faceless Masters of Higher Education: The Bologna Process, the Eu and the Open Method of Coordination

Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

This book offers an empirical and theoretical account of the mode of governance that characterizes the Bologna Process. In addition, it shows how the reform materializes and is translated in everyday working life among professors and managers in higher education. It examines the so-called Open Method of Coordination as a powerful actor that uses “soft governance” to advance transnational standards in higher education. The book shows how these standards no longer serve as tools for what were once human organizational, national or international, regulators. Instead, the standards have become regulators themselves – the faceless masters of higher education. By exploring this, the book reveals the close connections between the Bologna Process and the EU regarding regulative and monitoring techniques such as standardizations and comparisons, which are carried out through the Open Method of Coordination. It suggests that the Bologna Process works as a subtle means to circumvent the EU’s subsidiarity principle, making it possible to accomplish a European governance of higher education despite the fact that education falls outside EU’s legislative reach. The book’s research interest in translation processes, agency and power relations among policy actors positions it in studies on policy transfer, policy borrowing and globalization. However, different from conventional approaches, this study draws on additional interpretive frameworks such as new materialism.

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Chapters

Concluding Remarks: “Who Marks the Bench?”

This chapter concludes that the Open Method of Coordination, which constitutes the policy ontology of the Bologna Process, institutes the new mode of soft governance in which all agents become standardizers themselves. The bench is not marked from the outside. All the actors involved in the Bologna ... see more

The Alteration of Higher Education: The Performativity of Standards

Based on the previous chapters, this chapter suggests that the ‘peer-pressure ontology’ of the Bologna Process, including its material-affective infrastructure, is sustained by glossing over, and thus making invisible, the everyday organizational working life for professors and managers in higher ed... see more

The Infrastructure of the Bologna Process: Standards as Technology

Since 1999 the Bologna Process has moved from a declaration of intent to an extensive mobilization of 48 countries. But how come that the process gained this kind of momentum; how is it that those 48 countries were mobilized without passing any laws? This chapter aims to explore the mechanisms and i... see more

Standardizing Europe: Standards as a Mode of Governance

This chapter centers on the ways in which standards and standardization became key to set in motion the new form of soft governance in Europe. The dislocation of the governing of education from the EU to the Bologna Process prompted a shift in the design of governing from order-based to incentive-ba... see more

The Bologna Process: From Hard Government to Soft Governance

This chapter explores how the Bologna principles were part of an early EU agenda on European growth and how the Bologna Process and the EU Lisbon Agenda have become virtually indistinguishable since they have almost converged into one policy framework process. The chapter investigates the relation b... see more

Analyzing Education Reforms

This chapter explains how the monograph takes inspiration in performativity philosophy and new materialism. The chapter further presents how the monograph explores the Bologna Process through a multisited policy ethnography. In addition, the chapter positions the monograph within research on the Bol... see more

Introduction: It Changes Everything

This chapter outlines the line of narration of the monograph. The chapter presents how the monograph contributes to research on international higher education reform by offering an empirical and theoretical account of the mode of governance that characterizes the Bologna Process and by demonstrating... see more

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