About this Digital Document
Frances Vavrus would like to thank Emily Morris and Jasmine Trang Ha for providing valuable contributions to this article.
This article utilizes critical social theory to illuminate structures of inequality that undergird certain practices of internationalization in higher education institutions, particularly in U.S. institutions. We demonstrate how such theory can be productively employed to analyze three key dimensions of contemporary internationalization: 1) a representational dimension, 2) a political-economic dimension, and 3) a symbolic capital dimension. We argue that these three elements are central to any critical conceptualization of internationalization that has at its core a consideration of equity, ethics, and social justice. The overarching goal of this article is to illustrate how critical social theory can foster more extensive debate regarding the material and ideological systems of exclusion in international education and contribute to the task of reimagining internationalization.
Full Title
Critical Internationalization: Moving from Theory to Practice
Contributor(s)
Date Issued
2015
Language
English
Type
Genre
Form
electronic documents
Department name
Comparative and International Education
Media type
Identifier
Subject (LCSH)
Keywords
Date Other
2015
Has this item been published elsewhere?
Volume
02
Issue
02
Issue
02
Vavrus, . F., & Pekol, . A. (2015). Critical Internationalization: Moving from Theory to Practice (Vols. 02, Issues 02). https://doi.org/10.18275/fire201502021036
Vavrus, Frances, and Amy Pekol. 2015. “Critical Internationalization: Moving from Theory to Practice”. https://doi.org/10.18275/fire201502021036.
Vavrus, Frances, and Amy Pekol. Critical Internationalization: Moving from Theory to Practice. no. 02, 2015, https://doi.org/10.18275/fire201502021036.