ABSTRACT
This article examines the relationship among three Northeast Asian countries (China, Japan, South Korea), in terms of intra-regional collaboration and exchange in higher education. It highlights how geopolitical conflicts have continuously posed barriers to a more substantial regionalization of higher education, despite continuous efforts since the early 2000s. Rekindled historical conflicts, lack of regional leadership, lingering US influence and ultimately the outbreak of COVID-19 have further exacerbated uncertainty for regionalization of higher education in Northeast Asia. Collaborative efforts among the three countries to ease age-old geopolitical tensions, will be a prerequisite to achieving more substantial higher education regionalization in Northeast Asia. © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
ABSTRACT
This article examines the relationship among three Northeast Asian countries (China, Japan, South Korea), in terms of intra-regional collaboration and exchange in higher education. It highlights how geopolitical conflicts have continuously posed barriers to a more substantial regionalization of higher education, despite continuous efforts since the early 2000s. Rekindled historical conflicts, lack of regional leadership, lingering US influence and ultimately the outbreak of COVID-19 have further exacerbated uncertainty for regionalization of higher education in Northeast Asia. Collaborative efforts among the three countries to ease age-old geopolitical tensions, will be a prerequisite to achieving more substantial higher education regionalization in Northeast Asia.