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This book examines the developments of the UK Higher Education system, from a time of donnish dominion, progressive decline and the increasing role of the market via the introduction of tuition fees. It offers a protracted empirical analysis of the seven new English universities of the 1960s: the Universities of East Anglia, Essex, Kent, Lancaster, Sussex, Warwick and York. It explores the creation of these universities and investigates how they each responded to a number of centrally-imposed initiatives for change in UK higher education that have emerged since their foundation. It discusses changes in system governance and how the Higher Education policies it generated have impacted upon a particular segment of the English university model. Divided into three parts, the book first deals with such topics as the control the University Grants' Committee exercised in its heyday and how they initiated the launch of new universities. It then examines policy initiatives on governmentcuts on grants, research assessment exercises, quality assurance procedures and student tuition fees. The last part takes a broader approach to change by studying the significance and demise of Mission Groups, a changing system of Higher Education and more general changes regarding the state, the market and governance.
Shows how the UK has functioned as an experimental laboratory of innovations for Europe Offers an original view and an authoritative account of the UK HE system and its development Presents a rich narrative of the development of the new 1960s universities Clarifies the conditions defining the emergence of a national UK HE system and the implementation of market-line mechanisms
Contenu
Part I: The University Grants Committee and the Founding of the New Universities .- 1. Donnish Dominion Supreme? The University Grants Committee and the Governance of the English Universities.- 2. Founding the New Universities of the 1960s: Interpreting the UGC's Strategy.- Part II: State and Market Pressures to create a Different Model of the University .- 1. The UGC and Selective Cuts in Public Funding: Moving towards a more nuanced Model of the University and beyond Institutional Autonomy.- 2. Making the Research Dynamic Dominant in the Idea of the University.- 3. The New Universities and Quality Control: The Long Search for a Policy Consensus.- 4. Moving from the Public to the Private Funding of English Higher Education: The Imposition of Student Tuition Fees.- Part III: Towards the Emergence of a State-Regulated Market in Higher Education .- 1. The Significance of Mission Groups for the Structure of English Higher Education and the Demise of the1994 Group.- 2. Whatever happened to the New? Absorbed into a Changing System of Higher Education?.- 3. The State, the Market and the Changing Governance of Higher Education in England.- Coda: A Comparative Note on the New Universities: Reconsidering the Changing Structure and Character of Higher Education.
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