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Is globalisation dead? And what would this mean for universities?

War in Ukraine may reshape university internationalisation, but most academics do not expect a knockout blow

Published on
March 23, 2022
Last updated
April 6, 2022
World map made from 'fragile' stickers
Source: Getty

Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine has extinguished many of its cross-border academic and scientific ties for years to come, and some commentators say the impacts will stretch well beyond the former Soviet Union, completing a worldwide retreat from globalisation that began with Brexit and the Trump presidency and accelerated during the pandemic.

Newspaper columnists have warned that higher education and research will become embroiled in a global circling of the wagons, as a resurgent Cold War pits Western allies against a China-Russia bloc and many nations prioritise 鈥渆conomic sovereignty鈥 over mutual interdependence. 聽

Decoupling is already evident in finance, with Russia creating its own card payment and financial transfer systems years before its banks were banned from the Swift global financial transaction scheme in March.

In technology, countries and regions are pursuing self-sufficiency in the manufacture of semiconductor chips and choosing between rival Chinese and US-backed 5G networks. Western countries have discouraged or banned the importation of Chinese telecommunication equipment, while the US has barred Chinese supercomputing groups from obtaining American technology.

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THE Campus views: I ran the BBC World Service 鈥 it showed me how universities can be truly global


Europe鈥檚 desire to wean itself off Russian energy was laid bare when Germany halted certification of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline. In medicine, Western authorities have been slow to recognise eastern Covid-19 vaccines such as Russia鈥檚 Sputnik V, India鈥檚 Covaxin and China鈥檚 CanSino. Despite competing for vaccine markets, China and Russia have cooperated in trials and production.

Such geopolitical fault lines have been exacerbated by the Ukraine conflict and the responses it elicited, some suspect. 鈥淲e may decide that the definitive moment globalisation died was when China, India and South Africa all abstained on the United Nations vote condemning Putin鈥檚 invasion,鈥 聽British journalist Robert Peston.

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What could the death of globalisation mean for higher education? Could the cross-border flows of knowledge and students dry up, as nations rely on scholarly pursuits in their own institutions and those of like-minded neighbours? Could global trends undermine a core mission of universities 鈥 preparing or retraining workers for the knowledge economy 鈥 as manufacturing and food production is brought back in-house, and developed nations lean more on their own people for manual and repetitive labour?

Academics said that the war raises important questions about internationalisation, but most were sceptical that global cooperation has had its day 鈥 particularly for universities and research. 鈥淕lobalisation in the higher ed area is here to stay,鈥 declared Philip Altbach, of Boston College鈥檚 Center for International 糖心Vlog.

鈥淭here may be some hiccups and there might be some broader changes economically, but the globalisation of science and the knowledge economy are sufficiently entrenched that they are not going anywhere.鈥

Professor Altbach said it would take a 鈥渧ery long time鈥 for US relations with Russian science, academics and universities to return, 鈥渋f ever鈥, while student mobility into Russia would be confined to former Soviet countries. But these patterns were unlikely to extend to China, unless Beijing started supplying Moscow with money or arms.

He said that Chinese enrolments in major Western countries had been declining before Covid, partly because of 鈥渞apidly deteriorating relations鈥, but postgraduate applications were 鈥渄oing reasonably well鈥 and recent surveys indicated that Chinese interest in overseas study remained strong. 鈥淭hat [downward] trend is likely going to continue, but not in a big way,鈥 Professor Altbach said.

鈥淸Student] sending and receiving countries change from time to time, for all kinds of geopolitical and other reasons [including] immigration policies. Iran was at one point a very major sending country and isn鈥檛 any more. India was somewhat down and is now back up.鈥

Professor Altbach said Chinese doctoral students tended to remain in the US after graduating. He said international co-authorship of research papers would 鈥渞emain quite strong鈥, notwithstanding 鈥渂lips鈥 like the demise of collaboration with Russia.

James Laurenceson, director of the Australia-China Relations Institute at the University of Technology Sydney, said 鈥渁ll bets would be off鈥 if China offered Russia military assistance or blatantly disregarded Western sanctions. 鈥淏ut I consider neither likely, and as long as that鈥檚 the case, the US would struggle to rally a coalition to start hitting China with countermeasures,鈥 he said.

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鈥淢ost countries, certainly those in the Asia-Pacific, aren鈥檛 rushing to confront their major trading partner and the dominant economic and strategic reality in the region. My sense of China鈥檚 assessment is that its interests overwhelmingly lie with globalisation rather than isolationism. A broad technology decoupling from the West would be disastrous for its long-run growth prospects.鈥

Professor Laurenceson said Beijing鈥檚 failure to condemn the Ukraine invasion was 鈥渇ar from a full-throated backing. China is not Russia. This idea that somehow China and Russia are aligned in their outlook is just fundamentally wrong.鈥

He said that the invasion could mark the end of 鈥渦nfettered鈥 globalisation. 鈥淏ut that still leaves scope for an awful lot of globalisation to continue. There have been issues of research collaboration with China. The question is whether Ukraine dramatically adds to that. I just don鈥檛 think it does. Would Chinese parents be less interested in sending their children to Australia because of what鈥檚 happening in Ukraine?鈥

In an op-ed published by聽, Chinese ambassador Qin Gang rejected suggestions that his country had 鈥渁cquiesced to or tacitly supported鈥 the war. 鈥淭here were more than 6,000 Chinese citizens in Ukraine. China is the biggest trading partner of both Russia and Ukraine, and the largest importer of crude oil and natural gas in the world. Conflict between Russia and Ukraine does no good for China.鈥

Nevertheless, former intelligence analyst and diplomat Rory Medcalf said that the conflict would prompt Western institutions to re-examine their China links. 鈥淯niversities in democracies around the world would be well advised to consider their China exposure, and what would be their position in the event of a China war,鈥 said Professor Medcalf, who heads the National Security College at the Australian National University.

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鈥淚f China were to launch a violent assault on Taiwan, and potentially find itself at war with the US, it is likely that economic ties with China would shut down across many nations. Academic and research links would be part of this much larger rupture 鈥 not just on moral and political grounds, but because China has built much of its security capability from dual-use research with the West.鈥

Professor Medcalf said the world was unlikely to return to the 鈥渆asy globalisation鈥 of the past two or three decades. 鈥淭his is not an end to internationalisation, but what we鈥檙e losing now is globalisation. Just as with internet governance, we鈥檙e going to see increasingly different ecosystems existing side by side 鈥 authoritarians on one side and democracies on the other. I don鈥檛 see the geopolitical pressures easing, at least for the next decade, and they鈥檙e quite likely to get worse.鈥

Universities that tried to straddle these ecosystems faced 鈥渁 lot more complexity, mistrust and state intervention鈥, he added. Australian institutions, for example, would need to navigate the reporting regimes of the聽Foreign Relations Act, the聽Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme, the 2018聽Espionage and Foreign Interference Act听补苍诲听potentially other legislation. 鈥淔or many research relationships, the default position is going to be [that] it鈥檚 too difficult to try.鈥

But Professor Medcalf said that some forms of international collaboration could intensify 鈥 for example, among members of the Aukus security pact of Australia, Britain and the US. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite likely that there will be incentives from government and industry for universities in those countries to work much more closely on sensitive technology research.鈥

Gerry Postiglione, coordinator of the Consortium for 糖心Vlog Research in Asia at the University of Hong Kong, said collaboration could also intensify across the fault lines. 鈥淚f China races ahead in science and technology鈥ou may find more students from the West going there.

鈥淚t鈥檚 too early to say how this is going to shake out. The future is the riskiest venture to get into. Things happen fast or slow, depending upon the millions of factors that affect the economy, politics or military relations.鈥

Professor Postiglione agreed that universities would face more government-imposed controls around national security. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 still a lot of room outside that, and another factor at play is that most countries are on board regarding climate change. All countries realise that solutions to climate change, poverty alleviation, alternative energies or pandemics are best [found] in conjunction. I don鈥檛 see higher education globalisation slowing down.鈥

International education expert Louise Nicol said graduate employment outcomes, not geopolitical ruptures, would have the biggest impact on student flows.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 see any change to the thirst to go overseas and study if you can afford it 鈥 and, if finance can be made available, even if you can鈥檛 afford it,鈥 said Ms Nicol, founder of the Kuala Lumpur-based Asia Careers Group consultancy. 鈥淏ut I do I see a backlash from students when they can鈥檛 get jobs.鈥

Ms Nicol said that the Ukraine conflict and China鈥檚 zero-Covid policy would both affect student flows, at least temporarily. 鈥淪tudents aren鈥檛 going to go and study in Russia for a while, quite rightly, and at present they still can鈥檛 get into China.

鈥淏ut in the wake of the Ukraine crisis, I see more young Russians going overseas to study. And as soon as China鈥檚 borders open, I see a huge influx of people going there to study 鈥 and a huge outpouring of Chinese studying elsewhere.鈥

University of Melbourne human geographer Craig Jeffrey said India鈥檚 failure to condemn the invasion was broadly consistent with its decades-long聽non-aligned聽stance, and would be perceived that way. There was 鈥渘o way鈥 that Western institutions would refuse Indian students because of their government鈥檚 stance on Ukraine.

Professor Jeffrey said that the conflict could harm India鈥檚 economy by raising the price of oil and squeezing the availability of core food grains and fertiliser stock, of which both Ukraine and Russia were important suppliers. The crisis could also jeopardise the flow of Indian students to Russia, but it would not stem Delhi鈥檚 broader commitment to globalisation 鈥 particularly in higher education.

鈥淭he Indian government has made a major effort to make India an attractive place for its top students, attract students from other parts of the world and potentially open foreign branches of the Indian Institutes of Technology. They鈥檙e eager to learn from other countries about how to internationalise.鈥 Negotiations are already under way to聽host IIT outposts in the UK.

Conceptualisations of globalisation can be simplistic, Professor Jeffrey said, with developments like the withdrawal of McDonald鈥檚 from Russia given unwarranted significance. 鈥淵ou could say 1990 to 2022 was the era of globalisation because the Golden Arches were in Moscow, but that鈥檚 a pretty lazy way of thinking.鈥

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john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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Reader's comments (3)

I think that digital and blended learning, which are becoming -or have already become- the new norm in higher education will be a strong facilitator of the continuance of internationalisation in higher education, in the face of those adverse effects discussed in the article. This looks even more likely at the postgraduate level, in my view.
Maybe universities will step up and take the lead in keeping the flame of internationalisation and cooperation alight in the face of those who seek to turn the clock back to jingoism and xenophobia. We can no longer trust in governments to look out for our best interests, we need to step up and look out for them for ourselves. This is one way that academics and universities world-wide can contribute to the well-being of global citizens. Look at the earth from space. There are no national boundaries to be seen.
In a book published just before pandemic, I predict the decline and fade of the utilitarian model of universities shaped by globalization because of three major triggering factors: jobs, technology, and stupidity. Prolonged pandemic, more than thirty ongoing wars, and climate crisis accelerate the process. Recovering Humboldt鈥檚 ideals into contemporary education policies is not enough. We can no longer trust in governments to look out for best interests of knowledge and education, as claimed m.robertson8_291084. 鈥淕ive light, and the darkness will disappear of itself鈥 would start from the heritage of Copernicus, Erasmus and Galilei. (see: Rosso, R., The Decline and Renaissance of Universities, Springer, 2019).

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