Global crisis management and higher education: Agency and coupling in the context of wicked COVID-19 problems

被引:12
|
作者
Oleksiyenko, Anatoly [1 ]
Mendoza, Pilar [2 ]
Cardenas Riano, Fredy Esteban [3 ]
Dwivedi, Om Prakash [4 ]
Kabir, Arif H. [5 ]
Kuzhabekova, Aliya [6 ]
Charles, Muweesi [7 ]
Ros, Vutha [1 ]
Shchepetylnykova, Ielyzaveta [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Fac Educ, Comparat Educ Res Ctr CERC, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Missouri, Coll Educ & Human Dev, Columbia, MO USA
[3] Corp Univ Minuto de Dios, UNIMINUTO, Bogota, Colombia
[4] Bennett Univ, Sch Liberal Arts, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India
[5] Univ Dhaka, Inst Educ & Res, Dhaka, Bangladesh
[6] Nazarbayev Univ, Grad Sch Educ, Nur Sultan, Kazakhstan
[7] Busitema Univ, Dept Educ, Tororo, Uganda
关键词
COVID-19; crisis management; global higher education; human agency; institutional agency;
D O I
10.1111/hequ.12406
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Campus crisis management remains an understudied topic in the context of COVID-affected higher education. In this paper, we contrasted the ability to tame the wicked problems brought by the pandemic of COVID-19 in private and public universities in Bangladesh, Cambodia, Colombia, India, Kazakhstan, Uganda, and Ukraine. The cross-country analysis and diversity of institutional types allowed us to consider a wide range of challenges faced by academic leaders and their institutions during the global pandemic. By drawing on institutional policy reviews and interviews with university administrators, we have examined tensions between the human and institutional agencies on these crisis-stricken campuses given differing institutional coupling, sizes, resources, and missions. The focus on agential co-dependencies and institutional coupling lays the ground for conceptualizing campus crisis management as a culturally specific construct in the context of higher education affected by the global pandemic.
引用
收藏
页码:356 / 374
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] THE FAMILY PERSPECTIVE ON THE HIGHER EDUCATION CRISIS IN THE CONTEXT OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
    Infante Miranda, Maria Elena
    Molina Gutierrez, Teresa de Jesus
    Chuga Quemac, Rosa Evelyn
    REVISTA CONRADO, 2023, 19 : 218 - 224
  • [2] Education in Emergencies: Mapping the Global Education Research Landscape in the Context of the COVID-19 Crisis
    Durrani, Naureen
    Ozawa, Vanessa
    SAGE OPEN, 2024, 14 (01):
  • [3] Radical Solutions for Education in a Crisis Context: COVID-19 as an Opportunity for Global Learning
    Wei, Ting
    Yang, Juan
    EDUCATION AS CHANGE, 2022, 26
  • [4] COVID-19 and higher education in the global context: Exploring contemporary issues and challenges
    Zhang, Jing
    Shen, Huiwen
    JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY AND MANAGEMENT, 2024, 46 (02) : 236 - 239
  • [5] The Problems of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Higher Education
    Salakhova, Valentina B.
    Shukshina, Liudmila V.
    Belyakova, Natalia V.
    Kidinov, Alexey V.
    Morozova, Natalia S.
    Osipova, Natalia V.
    FRONTIERS IN EDUCATION, 2022, 7
  • [6] Crisis Management in Higher Education in the Time of Covid-19: The Case of Actor Training
    McNamara, Anna
    EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2021, 11 (03):
  • [7] Digital tools in higher education in the context of Covid-19
    Alves, Paulo
    Morais, Carlos
    Miranda, Luisa
    Pereira, Maria Joao, V
    Vaz, Josiana
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2021 16TH IBERIAN CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGIES (CISTI'2021), 2021,
  • [8] Managing pandemics as super wicked problems: lessons from, and for, COVID-19 and the climate crisis
    Graeme Auld
    Steven Bernstein
    Benjamin Cashore
    Kelly Levin
    Policy Sciences, 2021, 54 : 707 - 728
  • [9] Managing pandemics as super wicked problems: lessons from, and for, COVID-19 and the climate crisis
    Auld, Graeme
    Bernstein, Steven
    Cashore, Benjamin
    Levin, Kelly
    POLICY SCIENCES, 2021, 54 (04) : 707 - 728
  • [10] Higher Education Stakeholders' Early Responses to the COVID-19 Crisis
    Natow, Rebecca
    Johnson, Ane Turner
    Manly, Catherine A.
    AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2023, 67 (12) : 1387 - 1393