Preview

Vysshee Obrazovanie v Rossii = Higher Education in Russia

Advanced search

Uzbekistan: New Milestones of Higher Education Internationalization

https://doi.org/10.31992/0869-3617-2021-30-10-157-168

Abstract

Modern Uzbekistan undergoes wide-scale social and economic reforms that include the modernization of higher education system. This paper aims at evaluating the actual and potential impact of the reforms in Uzbekistan’s higher education on the Russian universities’ opportunities to export education to Uzbekistan. Accordingly, the paper traces the evolution of the national higher education system under President Islam A. Karimov (from 1991 to 2016), analyzes the new priorities of higher education policies set by his successor Shavkat M. Mirziyoyev, shows their interlinkages with the transition to a new model of national development, and focuses on the objectives and instruments of higher education internationalization. Theoretically and methodologically, the research relies on the concepts of internal and external internationalization of higher education, Clark’s model of higher education system elements, and Trow’s concept of higher education massification levels. The authors show the scale and interconnectedness of higher education challenges that have been developing in Uzbekistan in the course of the 25 years of its independence. The authors argue that higher education internationalization has become a way to achieve a number of objectives, in particular to improve the quality of higher education, orient it to massification, make it more accessible in the country’s regional centers. The paper shows the parameters of internal and external internationalization of higher education in Uzbekistan that has demonstrated the unprecedented dynamics in post-Soviet countries. The paper underlines that the policy of rapprochement with Russia launched by Tashkent in 2016 has created exceptionally beneficial opportunities for Russian universities to work in Uzbekistan and attract Uzbek students. Four mid-term scenarios of higher education internationalization in Uzbekistan are suggested.

About the Authors

E. F. Troitskiy
National Research Tomsk State University
Russian Federation

Evgeny F. Troitskiy – Dr. Sci. (History), Assoc. Prof.

36, Lenin ave., Tomsk, 634050



S. M. Yun
National Research Tomsk State University
Russian Federation

Sergey M. Yun – Cand. Sci. (History), Assoc. Prof.

36, Lenin ave., Tomsk, 634050



References

1. Knight, J. (2012). Concepts, Rationales, and Interpretive Frameworks in the Internationalization of Higher Education. In: Deardorff, D.K., de Wit, H., Heyl, J.D., Adams, T. (Eds.) The SAGE Handbook on International Higher Education. Thousand Oaks, CA : Sage, pp. 27-42.

2. Leask B. (2015). Internationalizing the Curriculum. N.Y. : Routledge.

3. De Wit, H. (2019). Evolving Concepts, Trends and Challenges in the Internationalization of Higher Education in the World. Voprosy obrazovaniya = Educational Studies Moscow. No. 2, pp. 8-34, doi: 10.17323/1814-9545-2019-2-8-34 (In Russ., abstract in Eng.).

4. Clark, B.R. (2011). The Higher Education System: Academic Organization in Cross-National Perspective. University of California Press. (Russian translation by A. Smirnov, Ed. D. Aleksandrov, Moscow: HSE Publ., 2011. 360 p.).

5. Trow, M. (1973). Problems in the Transition from Elite to Mass Higher Education. Berkeley: Carnegie Commission on Higher Education. Available at: https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED091983.pdf

6. Pomfret, R. (2019). The Central Asian Economies in the Twenty-First Century: Paving a New Silk Road. Princeton : Princeton University Press, 328 p.

7. Ergashev, B. (2020). The Principle of “Balanced Equidistance in Relation to World Power Centers” in Uzbekistan’s Foreign Policy. Rossiya i novye gosudarstva Evrazii = Russia and New States of Eurasia. No. I, pp. 124-136, doi: 10.20542/2073-4786-2020-1-124-136 (In Russ.).

8. Popov, V. (2013). An Economic Miracle in the Post-Soviet Space. How Uzbekistan Managed to Achieve What No Other Post-Soviet State Has. PONARS Eurasia Working Papers, August, doi: https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2303867

9. Zhukov, S.V., Reznikova, O.B. (2001). Tsentral’naya Aziya v sotsial’no-ekonomicheskikh strukturakh sovremennogo mira [Central Asia in the Social and Economic Structures of the Modern World]. Moscow: Moscow Public Science Foundation Publ. (In Russ.).

10. Huisman, J., Smolentseva, A., Frumin, I. (2018). 25 Years of Transformations of Higher Education Systems in Post-Soviet Countries: Reform and Continuity. Palgrave Macmillan. Available at: https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-3-319-52980-6 (accessed 31.08.21).

11. Yun, A. (2016). Corruption in Uzbek Higher Education: Detrimental Impurity for the Future. Bishkek: OSCE Academy; Norwegian Institute of International Affairs. Available at: https://etico.iiep.unesco.org/sites/default/files/Brief34.pdf (accessed 31.08.21).

12. Sondergaard, L., Murthi, M., Abu-Ghaida, D., Bodewig, Ch., Rutkowski, J. (2012). Skills, Not Just Diplomas: Managing Education for Results in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Wash., D.C.: World Bank. Available at: http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2368 (accessed 31.08.21).

13. Beelen, J., Jones, E. (2015). Redefining Internationalization at Home. In: Curai, A., Matei, L., Pricopie, R., Salmi, J., Scott, P. (Eds.). The European Higher Education Area: Between Critical Reflections and Future Policies. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 67-80.

14. Yun, S (2020). Vuzy Belorussii – glavnyi konkurent rossiyskikh vuziv v Uzbekistane? [Belorussian Universities: Are They the Main Competitor of Russian Universities in Uzbekistan?]. Tomsk: The Centre for TSU Eurasian Studies. Available at: http://eurasian-studies.tsu.ru/analitika/publikatcii/sergei-iun-vuzybelorussii-glavnyi-konkurent-rossiiskikh-vuzov-v-uzbekistane/ (accessed 31.08.21). (In Russ.).


Review

Views: 793


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 0869-3617 (Print)
ISSN 2072-0459 (Online)