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Higher education students as consumers: a cross-country comparative analysis of students’ views

Higher education students as consumers: a cross-country comparative analysis of students’ views
Higher education students as consumers: a cross-country comparative analysis of students’ views
The rapid expansion of neo-liberal regimes has effectively transformed how students – their role and purpose – are understood in society. Scholars, especially in the Anglophone North, have shown how dominant policy narratives tend to position students as consumers. More recent studies have begun to explore students’ views on this construction. However, much of this work focuses on a particular country; thus, how students’ opinions may vary across contexts remains largely underexamined. Redressing this gap, this article explores students’ perspectives on being constructed as consumers in Denmark, England, and Spain. It discusses similarities and differences across and within these countries. The paper shows that most students find this construction profoundly problematic and counter to the ideals of education as a public good. Yet, different, often contrasting, themes from students’ narratives signify the relevance of the funding regime and the level of stratification within HE sectors in shaping students’ understanding of consumerist discourse across Europe.
0305-7925
Gupta, Achala
a30fa79d-e9dc-4237-93d4-bdaf8816780a
Brooks, Rachel
e38ef734-6d0d-4d86-b2d8-909831b67619
Abrahams, Jessie
2f815106-e50a-42f4-ad17-c981a3372440
Gupta, Achala
a30fa79d-e9dc-4237-93d4-bdaf8816780a
Brooks, Rachel
e38ef734-6d0d-4d86-b2d8-909831b67619
Abrahams, Jessie
2f815106-e50a-42f4-ad17-c981a3372440

Gupta, Achala, Brooks, Rachel and Abrahams, Jessie (2023) Higher education students as consumers: a cross-country comparative analysis of students’ views. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The rapid expansion of neo-liberal regimes has effectively transformed how students – their role and purpose – are understood in society. Scholars, especially in the Anglophone North, have shown how dominant policy narratives tend to position students as consumers. More recent studies have begun to explore students’ views on this construction. However, much of this work focuses on a particular country; thus, how students’ opinions may vary across contexts remains largely underexamined. Redressing this gap, this article explores students’ perspectives on being constructed as consumers in Denmark, England, and Spain. It discusses similarities and differences across and within these countries. The paper shows that most students find this construction profoundly problematic and counter to the ideals of education as a public good. Yet, different, often contrasting, themes from students’ narratives signify the relevance of the funding regime and the level of stratification within HE sectors in shaping students’ understanding of consumerist discourse across Europe.

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Accepted/In Press date: 15 June 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 477904
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/477904
ISSN: 0305-7925
PURE UUID: ff8b0d5b-eac2-485e-ab36-2857fa895b67
ORCID for Achala Gupta: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3172-8198

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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2023 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:07

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Contributors

Author: Achala Gupta ORCID iD
Author: Rachel Brooks
Author: Jessie Abrahams

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