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Lukas Graf
Former Member
Title
Dr.
Last Name
Graf
First name
Lukas
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1 - 3 of 3
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PublicationVergleiche innerhalb von Gruppen und institutionelle Gelingensbedingungen. Vielversprechende Perspektiven für die Ungleichheitsforschung(Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB), WZB Disussion Paper SP I 2013-50, 2013-08-19)
;Solga, Heike ;Brzinsky-Fay, Christian ;Gresch, CorneliaProtsch, PaulaType: discussion paperIssue: WZB Disussion Paper SP I 2013-50 -
PublicationComparing the Relationship between Vocational and Higher Education in Germany and France(Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB), 2009)
;Powell, Justin J. W. ;Coutrot, Laurence ;Bernhard, Nadine ;Kieffer, AnnickSolga, HeikeA number of European initiatives aim to create a European educational space, including vocational training and higher education. Following the logic of difference, we ask whether, despite their different institutionalization, these two sectors in France and Germany react similarly to the Europe-wide Copenhagen and Bologna processes. We compare the relationship between vocational education and training (VET) and higher education (HE), contrasting a number of influential typologies. Analyzing the current situation, we ask whether these differences in postsecondary education and training systems continue to exist. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1465-3435.2012.01534.x/abstract Click here for more information]Type: discussion paperIssue: WZB Discussion Papers SP I 2009-506 -
PublicationApplying the Varieties of Capitalism Approach to Higher Education. A Case Study of the Internationalisation Strategies of German and British UniversitiesIn recent years the global market for higher education has expanded rapidly while internationalisation strategies have been developed at university, national, as well as European levels, all with the aim to increase the competitiveness of higher education institutions. This paper asks how different institutional settings explain distinct national patterns found in the internationalisation of universities, observed to be based largely on either market coordination or strategic interaction of the involved actors. Existing concepts from the Varieties of Capitalism literature, such as institutional complementarity and comparative institutional advantage, are introduced to the comparative study of higher education systems and applied to develop a theoretical framework for an institutional analysis of university strategies in the global market for higher education. In a case study, the analytical framework is then deployed to contrast the internationalisation of universities in Germany and the United Kingdom. The internationalisation processes reflect the mode of coordination in the respective higher education systems and national models of capitalism. Further insights are that the conceptual toolbox of the Varieties of Capitalism approach can be fruitfully applied to higher education, and that it is possible to enhance the framework by adding the state as a significant factor in differentiation.Type: discussion paperIssue: WZB Discussion Paper SP I 2008-507