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CORDIS - Résultats de la recherche de l’UE
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Contenu archivé le 2022-12-23

Study of higher education: structure and financing in Russia, Ukraine and the EU

CORDIS fournit des liens vers les livrables publics et les publications des projets HORIZON.

Les liens vers les livrables et les publications des projets du 7e PC, ainsi que les liens vers certains types de résultats spécifiques tels que les jeux de données et les logiciels, sont récupérés dynamiquement sur OpenAIRE .

Résultats exploitables

The project reviews and compares higher education systems in the European Union, Russia and Ukraine, focusing on issues of financing, links between teaching and research, institutional reforms, and internal incentives. The topic has empirical and conceptual aspects. On the former, there are simply large amounts of information on respective higher education systems that can be assembled in a useful form. On the latter, there are many models of higher education and of the behaviour of institutions and individuals within them under various conditions. It was important, in the course of this project, not merely to describe various systems, but for the partners to try to gain a deeper understanding of their functioning by applying or adapting relevant models. Through a research workshop in Edinburgh, various more informal meetings and through a research visit to Tomsk in Russia, the project has generated an interesting set of papers covering such topics as: academic careers in European universities, studies of university cost functions (in the UK and Russia), case studies of particular institutions (in Ukraine and Russia). The research confirms our initial hypothesis that it makes sense to analyse universities as if they were institutions maximising some form of objective (related to their principal outputs of teaching and research) subject to constraints to do with their budgets and various organizational factors. At the same time, for the Russian and Ukrainian cases in particular, it is clear that in many important respects behaviour patterns associated with a non market economy are still very much in effect, and influence the functioning of the universities. Hence in the higher education sector, the transition to the market is still very far from complete.

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