Upenyu S. Majee’s research while affiliated with Michigan State University and other places

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Publications (3)


Beyond the Local–Global Binaries of Higher Education Internationalization in Post-apartheid South Africa
  • Article

December 2019

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49 Reads

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9 Citations

Journal of Studies in International Education

Upenyu S. Majee

The article critiques the tendency in the field of international education to theorize internationalization around the impacts of and policy responses to globalization in local contexts. The central argument of the article is that South Africa’s history and development prospects are so intricately bound up with those of its neighbors in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region that it would be misleading for the country to be talked about in just national/local and global terms. To develop this argument on South Africa’s roles and situation in a regionally interconnected context, I draw on insights from an institutional ethnography of a top-rated, historically White South African public university. While local–global discourses were institutionalized nationally and institutionally through policies for transformation and internationalization, the conspicuous absence of formal institutional structures for regionalization shows the limitations of local–global or global north–south dichotomies in analyzing structures that operate both above and below the level of the nation-state.


Colonial legacies in internationalisation of higher education: racial justice and geopolitical redress in South Africa and Brazil
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2018

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61 Reads

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10 Citations

Internationalisation of higher education has mostly been theorised from a Euro-American perspective, taking less into account how legacies of colonial expansion impose unique demands on universities. This article highlights the tensions that arise when universities must respond simultaneously to transnational pressures for internationalisation and local demands for racial justice. Drawing on insights from two qualitative case studies at public universities in South Africa and Brazil, it is argued that the inbound mobility of regional students serves the instrumental purpose of holding together these conflicting imperatives at the level of the individual institution without fully accounting for international students in institutional discourses, policies and structures

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Colonial legacies in internationalisation of higher education: racial justice and geopolitical redress in South Africa and Brazil

October 2018

·

294 Reads

·

60 Citations

Internationalisation of higher education has mostly been theorised from a Euro-American perspective, taking less into account how legacies of colonial expansion impose unique demands on universities. This article highlights the tensions that arise when universities must respond simultaneously to transnational pressures for internationalisation and local demands for racial justice. Drawing on insights from two qualitative case studies at public universities in South Africa and Brazil, it is argued that the inbound mobility of regional students serves the instrumental purpose of holding together these conflicting imperatives at the level of the individual institution without fully accounting for international students in institutional discourses, policies and structures.

Citations (3)


... This feeds into a persisting neglect of the humanising aspect of internationalization, drowned within dominant neoliberal marketized constructs. Arguably, in the last three decades scholarly observations regarding the conceptual fuzziness and limitations around internationalization definitions (de Wit and Altbach, 2021;Majee, 2020;Marginson, 2023;Teichler, 1999) also reflects the missing voices of individuals at the heart of internationalization. ...

Reference:

Conceptualizing micro-level internationalization from empirical and conceptual constructs: adding the human dimension
Beyond the Local–Global Binaries of Higher Education Internationalization in Post-apartheid South Africa
  • Citing Article
  • December 2019

Journal of Studies in International Education

... Hence, looking at these phenomena through a critical lens can make this connection more evident. Several scholars argue that internationalization agendas for HE are often driven by Euro-American interests (e.g., Leite, 2010;Jowi, 2012;Majee;Ress, 2020), intensifying the still very concrete echoes of colonialism. This could be because HE internationalization has been treated via a similar universalist, essentialist outlook as that of globalization, one which is primarily based on economic processes, oftentimes ignoring sociocultural and political ones (Rizvi, 2007), as if HE internationalization and globalization were natural outcomes of 'modern life', manifested in 'rarified' fashion (Majee;Ress, 2020). ...

Colonial legacies in internationalisation of higher education: racial justice and geopolitical redress in South Africa and Brazil

... Over the last 40 years, internationalization has caused a lot of changes in higher education and has been the subject of more than 2300 scholarly papers (Kosmützky & Putty, 2016;Kuzhabekova et al., 2015). Much attention has been paid to neoliberalism (Bamberger et al., 2019), (neo)colonialism (Majee & Ress, 2020) and deficit narratives (Lomer & Mittelmeier, 2021). The progress in educational technologies has resulted in the emergence of new internationalization activities that pose challenges in their classification as either IA (Internationalization of the Academy) or IaH (Internationalization at Home) (Madge et al., 2009). ...

Colonial legacies in internationalisation of higher education: racial justice and geopolitical redress in South Africa and Brazil