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Internationalisation, sustainability and the contested environmental impacts of international student mobility

David McCollum (Department of Geography and Sustainable Development, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK, and)
Hebe Nicholson (Department of Social, Economic and Geographical Sciences, The James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, UK)

International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education

ISSN: 1467-6370

Article publication date: 31 March 2023

Issue publication date: 13 November 2023

223

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to stimulate the nascent research agenda on the environmental sustainability of the ongoing mushrooming of international student mobility (ISM). The higher education (HE) system in the UK and elsewhere is increasingly predicated upon the hosting of international students. Whilst this drive towards internationalisation undoubtably has multiple benefits, little attention thus far has been paid to its potentially very considerable environmental impact. The drive for internationalisation within HE thus potentially sits at odds with ambitions and strategies to promote sustainability within the sector and beyond.

Design/methodology/approach

In-depth interviews with 21 students and representatives of 14 university international offices offer insights into how the environment features in the decisions that young people and HE institutions make with regards to partaking in and promoting education-related mobility.

Findings

The results find that students take environmental considerations into account when undertaking education-related mobility, but these aspirations are often secondary to logistical issues concerning the financial cost and longer travel times associated with greener travel options. At the institutional scale, vociferously championed university sustainability agendas have yet to be reconciled with the financial imperative to recruit evermore international students.

Originality/value

This paper identifies a thus far neglected contradiction within HE whereby the sustainability agenda that it so rightly espouses is potentially undermined by the drive towards internationalisation. The paper uses the anthropause concept to consider the future environmental sustainability of ISM.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank Lydia Cole and Clarissa Bell for their support in designing and conducting this research. Thanks to the two anonymous reviewers who provided comments on this paper. This research was funded through the ESRC Centre for Population Change (CPC), grant number ES/R009139/1.

Citation

McCollum, D. and Nicholson, H. (2023), "Internationalisation, sustainability and the contested environmental impacts of international student mobility", International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, Vol. 24 No. 7, pp. 1561-1575. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSHE-09-2022-0299

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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