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El. knyga: How China's System of Higher Education Works: Pragmatic Instrumentalism, Centralized-Decentralization, and Rational Chaos

(Beijing Normal University, China)

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Green sheds light onto the mercurial and ill-defined boundaries of institutional governance within China’s unique system of higher education, a national system that remains misunderstood by scholars and some see as little more than a research arm of the party/state.



Green sheds light onto the mercurial and ill-defined boundaries of institutional governance within China’s unique system of higher education, a national system that remains misunderstood by scholars who continue to position it as little more than a research arm of the party/state.

Through a synthesis of systems theory, complexity theory, and institutional logics, Green provides a relational accounting of "Higher Education with Chinese Characteristics" – a complex, adaptive social system whose paradoxical modernization ideology of pragmatic instrumentalism, in conjunction with a centralized-decentralized governance model, foments rational chaos at the institutional level. Specifically, his book highlights the concept of rational chaos – an observable phenomenon of evolutionary emergence experienced by subaltern actors engaged with the confusing and often paradoxical institutional logics of meso/micro-level governance. Moreover, developed through in-depth narrative interviews, Green’s conceptualization of collective-individualism provides a glimpse into the diverse patterns of identity that have developed within a single institutional governance context. These discrete identity formations, patterned through varying understandings of individual self-determinism, collective role fulfillment, norms and structures of governance, and subsequent changemaking efforts, call into question culturally deterministic research surrounding self-mastery, institutional autonomy, and academic freedom within the Chinese higher education context.

His book highlights a subaltern institutional lifeworld accounting of higher education governance that will speak to anyone grappling with neoliberal commodification, managerialism, academic nationalism and the increasing onset of transnational academic (im)mobility. It is ideal for students and scholars of international comparative education, higher education governance, and Chinese studies.

Acknowledgments Preface
1. Higher Education with Chinese
Characteristics: HEWCC
2. Pragmatic Instrumentalism: A Faulty Modernization
Ideology
3. Chinas Centralized-Decentralized Higher Education Governance
Model
4. Vacillation on Institutional Autonomy and Academic Freedom: A
Discourse of Uncertainty
5. Self-Mastery: A Misrepresented Concept within
China Higher Education
6. In Pursuit of Rational Chaos: A Dynamic of
Evolutionary Emergence within Chinas Complex System of Higher Education
7.
Rational Chaos and Collective-Individualism: Diverse Patterns of Identity and
Institutional Change
8. Towards a Praxis of Collective Individualism: No
Longer Dancing in the Chains of Self-Mastery
9. Conclusion: A Call for
Increased Understanding and Engagement with HEWCC
11. Appendix: Eight
Interviews Coded through the RCM for Identity and Institutional Change
Benjamin J. Green is Assistant Professor in the College of Teacher Education at Beijing Language and Culture University. He received his Ph.D. in Comparative Education from the Faculty of Education at Beijing Normal University. His recent works have focused on China's higher education internationalization, US-China relations, digital nationalism, critical cosmopolitanism, collective intelligence, and Chinese internationalism as a contested project of alternative modernity.