Unraveling the skilled mobility for sustainable development mantra: an analysis of China-EU academic mobility
Publication date
2013
Authors
Leung, W.H.M.
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Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
In the name of sustainable development, skilled persons including scholars,
researchers and students have become incorporated in the “sustainable development”
visions and strategies of institutions, city centers and nation-states near and far from where
these potentially mobile brains are. Policies and programs have widely been implemented
to foster move-in move-out mobility of these talents sans frontières who should contribute
to the competitiveness of their affiliated institutions and structures in the global knowledge
economy. This paper unravels this emergent academic mobility for sustainable
development mantra. It unpacks the meanings of “sustainable development” and
“sustainability” as used in relation to temporary (often circulatory) mobility of students and
academics in different contexts. An analysis of European and specifically China-EU
academic mobility initiatives illustrates the multi-fold meanings of sustainability in this
policy terrain. Zooming into the Chinese-German case, the paper highlights the common
dominance of economic and environmental elements in the current “academic mobility for
sustainability” construct that sidelines important social components such as equity and
diversity. Statistical data and narratives will be provided to illustrate the stark gender
and disciplinary bias in the Chinese-German staff academic mobility field. The paper
argues for conscious, affirmative efforts by policy-makers and funding agencies to correct
existing imbalances.
Keywords
academic mobility, sustainable development, social sustainability, gender, diversity, equity, China, EU, Germany