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Internationalisation strategies for management education

W. Stewart Howe (University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland)
Graeme Martin (University of Abertay Dundee, Scotland)

Journal of Management Development

ISSN: 0262-1711

Article publication date: 1 August 1998

3942

Abstract

Western business schools currently face a number of pressures to internationalise their postgraduate course provision in terms both of content and place of delivery. In doing so they are faced with decisions concerning their motivations, the broad strategies to adopt, the nature of collaborative links with host‐country institutions, and a number of practical matters. The literature suggests that many of such issues have now broadly become clearly identified, and that a general “model” of postgraduate management course internationalisation may have begun to emerge. In this article a survey of the literature is followed by a case study of the internationalisation experience of a small UK university business school. It reports on the extent to which its experience supports the model and highlights other issues. The conclusion of the analysis is that an emergent strategy in this respect, not necessarily following a clear stages model, has nonetheless been largely successful.

Keywords

Citation

Stewart Howe, W. and Martin, G. (1998), "Internationalisation strategies for management education", Journal of Management Development, Vol. 17 No. 6, pp. 447-462. https://doi.org/10.1108/02621719810227499

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1998, MCB UP Limited

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