This paper fills the debate about convergence or divergence in higher education organizational change, analysing university institutional governance reforms and their implementation in two Napoleonic states (Italy and Portugal), a cluster of countries under-researched in comparative perspectives in HE governance literature. We develop a multi-level analysis, first addressing how international concepts have been translated into national laws (‘Gelmini’ reform in Italy and RJIES in Portugal); second assessing how all state universities in both countries implemented them by analysing their new statutes. Our findings show that both states preserve traits of their previous institutional governance model. Past features shape the way countries respond to the transnational model of legitimized university governance. Thus, policy alternatives that prove feasible at a given point in time are limited by the historical-institutional context. Consequently, the concept of organizational allomorphism explains the current pattern in HE institutional governance reform better than both convergence and divergence.

(2018). Convergence or divergence in University institutional governance reforms? Comparing Napoleonic States . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/124798

Convergence or divergence in University institutional governance reforms? Comparing Napoleonic States

Donina, Davide;Paleari, Stefano
2018-01-01

Abstract

This paper fills the debate about convergence or divergence in higher education organizational change, analysing university institutional governance reforms and their implementation in two Napoleonic states (Italy and Portugal), a cluster of countries under-researched in comparative perspectives in HE governance literature. We develop a multi-level analysis, first addressing how international concepts have been translated into national laws (‘Gelmini’ reform in Italy and RJIES in Portugal); second assessing how all state universities in both countries implemented them by analysing their new statutes. Our findings show that both states preserve traits of their previous institutional governance model. Past features shape the way countries respond to the transnational model of legitimized university governance. Thus, policy alternatives that prove feasible at a given point in time are limited by the historical-institutional context. Consequently, the concept of organizational allomorphism explains the current pattern in HE institutional governance reform better than both convergence and divergence.
CCSE - CISAlpino Institute for Comparative Studies in Europe
scientifica
Inglese
2018
Organizing in the shadow of power
Canonico, Paolo; Consiglio, Stefano; Mangia,Gianluigi; Martinez, Marcello; Mercurio, Riccardo; Moschera, Luigi
cartaceo
online
978-88-98-85428-8
51
84
Italy
Roma
Minerva Bancaria
esperti anonimi
Settore ING-IND/35 - Ingegneria Economico-Gestionale
Settore SECS-P/10 - Organizzazione Aziendale
Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica
Higher education reform; Organizational change; Allomorphism; Italy; Portugal;
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
(2018). Convergence or divergence in University institutional governance reforms? Comparing Napoleonic States . Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/124798
reserved
1.2 Contributi in volume - Book chapters::1.2.01 Contributi in volume (Capitoli o Saggi) - Book Chapters/Essays
Non definito
Donina, Davide; Bruckmann, Sofia; Paleari, Stefano
3
268
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