This volume explores the implications of student mobility on higher education across the Asia Pacific Region. Student Mobility has become a major feature of higher education throughout the world, and most particularly over the past two decades within the Asia Pacific Region. This system of mobility is entering a period of profound predicted change, created by the social and economic transformations being occasioned by the rapid increased uses of artificial intelligence (AI), a process that is being increasingly framed as the “Fourth Industrial Revolution” or Work 4.0, a process that is widely predicted to evoke fundamental changes in the ways that work is performed and who does it. This volume explores various dimensions of this process, examining various aspects of the process as they are affecting national and regional economies even as the phenomenon produces a wide variety of engagements with the global economy as a whole.
Shingo Ashizawa is a professor and Vice President at Kansai University of International Studies in Kobe. His research involves foreign credential evaluation, micro-credential and the comparative study of the National Qualifications Framework. He also leads several joint research projects funded by Japanese government agencies and the Toyota Foundation.
Deane E. Neubauer is Professor Emeritus at the University of Hawaii, Manoa, USA. He also currently serves as the Associate Director of the Asia Pacific Higher Education Research Partnership (APHERP), headquartered at Lingnan University, Hong Kong, which conducts a wide range of policy-focused research with a special focus on higher education.