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The Bologna Process from a Latin American PerspectiveUniversidad Diego Portales, Santiago, Chile, josejoaquin.brunner{at}gmail.com Although Latin Americas geography, history, and languages might seem a suitable foundation for a Bologna-type process, the development of a common Latin American higher education and research area meets predictable difficulties.The reasons are to be found in the continents historic and modern institutional patterns. Latin American governments increasingly limit their interventions to funding and rely on the free play of the forces of supply and demand, institutional and corporate interests, and negotiated rules of the game to coordinate their systems. Moreover, Latin Americas dynamic tertiary education systems face structural, organizational, and functional obstacles that often discourage international convergence.However, Bologna is stimulating closer university collaboration between Latin American and European institutions, particularly Spanish and Portuguese universities, in an effort to create an Ibero-American area of knowledge, with student and faculty exchanges. Thus Bologna has had an indirect stimulus by encouraging collaboration, and concomitant issues such as Latin Americas current debate about curricular reform and higher education competitiveness.
Key Words: national systems institutional patterns political economy government policies marketization convergence
This version was published on December
1, 2009 Journal of Studies in International Education, Vol. 13, No. 4,
417-438 (2009) |
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