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This paper examines the evolving trends in Chinese student mobility to Thailand, highlighting three distinct phases shaped by changes in the higher education: the dominance of Thai language programmes (1990–2010), the rise of business and international programmes (2010–2020), and the increasing preference for graduate studies (2020 onwards). By analysing the economic, cultural, and institutional factors facilitating these shifts, this paper positions Thailand as an emerging alternative study destination for Chinese students. It highlights the significance of this migration within the context of Thailand’s declining fertility rate and labour shortages, focusing on how Thai universities have adapted through active recruitment strategies targeting Chinese students. This paper also addresses the push and pull factors underpinning this migration and the pursuit of alternative educational pathways among Chinese youth. Additionally, it explores the strategic role of Sino-Thai collaborations under the BRI and their broader implications for educational mobility and economic ties.
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This study investigates career trajectory and work locations of doctoral students trained in Macao and analyses how their career paths are shaped by perceived macro-level factors. Respondents from four applied disciplinary areas were selected for semi-structured in-depth interviews. Research results show that doctoral students who graduated from Macao higher education institutions enjoy good career prospects in Mainland China. Their competitiveness in the research-related job market benefits from having a multi-level support system and a training mode that promotes government–university–industry collaboration. Policies and demand from industrial sectors are involved in students' learning experience through channels such as financial support, project collaboration and networks. Doctoral students in Macao are strategic planners and actors in leveraging their human capital. As Macao becomes an emerging destination for cultivating high-level research labour, findings from this study capture a model of human capital formation in China's cross-system context.
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Higher Education in Macau has been benefiting from a multi-layered institutional environment under China’s One-Country-Two-Systems. This presentation introduces research and education policies and practices of Macau universities under China’s national plan of the Greater Bay Area development. It aims to demonstrate and analyze how higher education actors collaborate with local and regional governments and industrial sectors in human capital formation and research innovations.
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Since the launch of the One Belt and One Road Initiative (BRI) in 2013, the internationalisation of China’s tertiary education has entered a new stage. Central to the BRI is investment and strategic planning for talent cultivation, knowledge production, and transmission. This paper explains how the BRI redirects, reinforces, and intensifies China’s strategic planning and actions for internationalising its education. It adopts a policy analysis approach and reviews three key aspects of development and shifting emphasis of internationalisation under the impact of the BRI: international education networks along the Six BRI Economic Corridors, vocational colleges as new players in international education, and promotion of the Chinese language as a new global language. The analysis captures an important moment in which international education processes are being visibly altered through China’s strategies to take the lead in economic globalisation and to compete for a central place in the world via the BRI.
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