Implications of overlapping regionalism in higher education: opportunities for policy transfer and strategic cooperation in the post-Soviet space
Policy Analysis
Public Policy
Regionalism
Knowledge
Higher Education
Abstract
This paper maps various regional (higher) education coordination initiatives that have developed in the post-Soviet space since the early 1990s, focusing on overlap in countries and issues, and pinpointing state and non-state actors involved. This mapping provides the basis for identifying opportunities for policy transfer across time and space, as well as the extent to which multiple initiatives in higher education provide openings for cooperation in other areas. This serves to discuss the temporal and cross-national higher education policy linkages, as well as linkages between higher education policy developments and developments in other policy domains.
The conceptual approach combines the literature on overlapping regionalism (Hettne, 2005; Panke & Stapel, 2018) and regionalism in higher education (Chou & Ravinet, 2015; Jayasuriya & Robertson, 2010) with insights about policy transfer (Dolowitz & Marsh, 2012), in particular those highlighting the importance of power and time (Dolowitz, Plugaru, & Saurugger, 2019). The empirical basis comprises various policy documents and secondary sources.
The analysis shows that despite the risks of being exposed to conflicting rules, ex-USSR states are particularly inclined to produce overlapping regionalisms through policy transfer. In this way they create an opportunity structure enabling them to exert their agency through forum shopping or strategic inconsistency mechanisms (Russo & Gawrich, 2017) in a region characterised by power asymmetries between Russia and ‘smaller’ states. These incentives, combined with loose obligations and supplementary role of higher education in relation to security and economic issues in the post-Soviet regional projects, make overlaps immanent in the higher education policy sector.
References
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