The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?

<p>The goal of the Bologna Process was to develop a European Higher Education Area within a decade. The goal and the process proved to be attractive, new countries steadily applied for accession, and the Bologna Process has brought about substantial reforms. At the same time, the drive and opt...

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Main Author: Sjur Bergan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Deusto 2019-05-01
Series:Tuning Journal for Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tuningjournal.org/article/view/1572
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spelling doaj-655e204dd4fe456f87f1670e8d6b1a962020-11-24T21:44:53ZengUniversidad de DeustoTuning Journal for Higher Education2340-81702386-31372019-05-0162234910.18543/tjhe-6(2)-2019pp23-491422The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?Sjur Bergan0Council of Europe<p>The goal of the Bologna Process was to develop a European Higher Education Area within a decade. The goal and the process proved to be attractive, new countries steadily applied for accession, and the Bologna Process has brought about substantial reforms. At the same time, the drive and optimism of the early years has given way to more measured optimism and even a sense of disillusion as we approach the 20th anniversary of the Bologna Declaration. The article outlines six phases in the development of the European Higher Education Area and then looks at some of the main challenges the EHEA faces as it approaches its third decade. Structural reforms have been the hallmark of the EHEA, and in this area the main challenges concern implementation rather than the development of new structures even if some policy challenges also remain. In the run-up to the 2018 Ministerial conference, EHEA faced a bitter debate on the character of the EHEA itself, linked to the questions of how to foster implementation of commitments undertaken and what it means to be a voluntary process. The fundamental values on which the EHEA builds are now threatened in some EHEA members, the role of the EHEA in a global context, and its relevance and governance constitute other challenges.</p><p><strong>Received</strong><span>: 08 April 2019</span><br /><strong>Accepted</strong><span>: 29 April 2019</span><br /><strong>Published online</strong><span>: 29 May 2019</span></p>http://www.tuningjournal.org/article/view/1572Bologna ProcessEuropean Higher Education Areastructural reformsfundamental valueshigher education cooperationhigher education governancehigher education policyintergovernmental cooperation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sjur Bergan
spellingShingle Sjur Bergan
The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
Tuning Journal for Higher Education
Bologna Process
European Higher Education Area
structural reforms
fundamental values
higher education cooperation
higher education governance
higher education policy
intergovernmental cooperation
author_facet Sjur Bergan
author_sort Sjur Bergan
title The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
title_short The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
title_full The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
title_fullStr The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
title_full_unstemmed The European Higher Education Area: A road to the future or at way’s end?
title_sort european higher education area: a road to the future or at way’s end?
publisher Universidad de Deusto
series Tuning Journal for Higher Education
issn 2340-8170
2386-3137
publishDate 2019-05-01
description <p>The goal of the Bologna Process was to develop a European Higher Education Area within a decade. The goal and the process proved to be attractive, new countries steadily applied for accession, and the Bologna Process has brought about substantial reforms. At the same time, the drive and optimism of the early years has given way to more measured optimism and even a sense of disillusion as we approach the 20th anniversary of the Bologna Declaration. The article outlines six phases in the development of the European Higher Education Area and then looks at some of the main challenges the EHEA faces as it approaches its third decade. Structural reforms have been the hallmark of the EHEA, and in this area the main challenges concern implementation rather than the development of new structures even if some policy challenges also remain. In the run-up to the 2018 Ministerial conference, EHEA faced a bitter debate on the character of the EHEA itself, linked to the questions of how to foster implementation of commitments undertaken and what it means to be a voluntary process. The fundamental values on which the EHEA builds are now threatened in some EHEA members, the role of the EHEA in a global context, and its relevance and governance constitute other challenges.</p><p><strong>Received</strong><span>: 08 April 2019</span><br /><strong>Accepted</strong><span>: 29 April 2019</span><br /><strong>Published online</strong><span>: 29 May 2019</span></p>
topic Bologna Process
European Higher Education Area
structural reforms
fundamental values
higher education cooperation
higher education governance
higher education policy
intergovernmental cooperation
url http://www.tuningjournal.org/article/view/1572
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