Du, Xiaoxin.
Role Differentiation in Chinese Higher Education Tensions between Political Socialization and Academic Autonomy / [electronic resource] :
by Xiaoxin Du.
- 1st ed. 2020.
.- Singapore :: : , 2020.,
.- XVI, 178 p. 18 illus., 12 illus. in color., online resource.
-ISBN 9789811583001
- Governance and Citizenship in Asia, 2365-6255
- SpringerLink (Online service),
- Governance and Citizenship in Asia, .
Chapter 1 Introduction: Chinese Higher Education and Its Political Task -- Chapter 2 Theoretical Perspectives: Political Socialization and Higher Education -- Chapter 3 Historical Review on JU (1903-2013): A Wrestle Between Political Restriction and University Autonomy in Chinese Higher Education -- Chapter 4 Different Players’ Deduction on Political Task -- Chapter 5 The University’s Practices to Ensure the Complement of Political Task -- Chapter 6 Practices to Seek for Academic Freedom and Critical Thinking Under Political Restriction -- Chapter 7 Practices to Look for Flexibility and Alternative Space Under Political Restriction -- Chapter 8 Political Socialization in Chinese Higher Education: Role Differentiation as a Strategy.
This book examines tensions between the Chinese state and Chinese universities. It looks at the state’s demand for political socialization as a restriction on university autonomy and the university’s promotion of academic development through promoting academic freedom and fostering critical thinkers, using Jour University in PRC, as a case study. The book focuses on the dynamics and complexity of the interplay between the state, universities, faculty, staff and students in the process of socialization through political education and academic affairs. Theories on political socialization and higher education guide this study. As universities’ socio-political task of imbuing students with a certain type of ideology coexists with their role of promoting university autonomy, examining China’s higher education system provides important insights as different players’ interaction. These present a dynamic picture of role differentiation as a strategy to cope with a politically restricted autonomy, which challenges some common stereotypes that have been put on Chinese universities within the global community.
10.1007/978-981-15-8300-1 doi
Higher education. Educational policy. Education and state. School management and organization. School administration. International education . Comparative education. Higher Education. Educational Policy and Politics. Administration, Organization and Leadership. International and Comparative Education.