Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes

Resting on a new database on professors of law and economic sciences from Swiss universities in the 20th century, this article accounts for different dynamics of internationalisation of this elite group. Three major conclusions can be drawn from our analyses: first, we can divide the 20th century in...

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Main Authors: Thierry Rossier, Marion Beetschen, André Mach, Felix Bühlmann
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Les éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’Homme 2015-04-01
Series:Cahiers de la Recherche sur l'Education et les Savoirs
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/cres/2780
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spelling doaj-2aaf3d5aebb140ffa2ea9f933c181d1c2020-11-25T00:07:25ZfraLes éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’HommeCahiers de la Recherche sur l'Education et les Savoirs1635-35442265-77622015-04-0114119139Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastesThierry RossierMarion BeetschenAndré MachFelix BühlmannResting on a new database on professors of law and economic sciences from Swiss universities in the 20th century, this article accounts for different dynamics of internationalisation of this elite group. Three major conclusions can be drawn from our analyses: first, we can divide the 20th century in three distinct historic periods. A strong internationalisation of the academic elites at the beginning of the century is followed by a period of nationalisation or regionalisation subsequent to the First World War. From the 1960s onwards, we observe a “re-internationalisation”, which is even accelerated in the 1980s. Second, professors in the economic sciences are more international and less locally anchored than their counterparts in law, in particular when we examine their nationality or their place of education. Finally, the German preponderance among Swiss university professors in the early century makes room, particularly in economic sciences, to the rising influence of the USA. This is a sign that an internationalisation of “excellence” has increasingly replaced an internationalisation of “proximity”.http://journals.openedition.org/cres/2780Academic elitesEconomicsInternationalizationLawSwitzerland
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thierry Rossier
Marion Beetschen
André Mach
Felix Bühlmann
spellingShingle Thierry Rossier
Marion Beetschen
André Mach
Felix Bühlmann
Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
Cahiers de la Recherche sur l'Education et les Savoirs
Academic elites
Economics
Internationalization
Law
Switzerland
author_facet Thierry Rossier
Marion Beetschen
André Mach
Felix Bühlmann
author_sort Thierry Rossier
title Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
title_short Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
title_full Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
title_fullStr Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
title_full_unstemmed Internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au XXe siècle : convergences et contrastes
title_sort internationalisation des élites académiques suisses au xxe siècle : convergences et contrastes
publisher Les éditions de la Maison des sciences de l’Homme
series Cahiers de la Recherche sur l'Education et les Savoirs
issn 1635-3544
2265-7762
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Resting on a new database on professors of law and economic sciences from Swiss universities in the 20th century, this article accounts for different dynamics of internationalisation of this elite group. Three major conclusions can be drawn from our analyses: first, we can divide the 20th century in three distinct historic periods. A strong internationalisation of the academic elites at the beginning of the century is followed by a period of nationalisation or regionalisation subsequent to the First World War. From the 1960s onwards, we observe a “re-internationalisation”, which is even accelerated in the 1980s. Second, professors in the economic sciences are more international and less locally anchored than their counterparts in law, in particular when we examine their nationality or their place of education. Finally, the German preponderance among Swiss university professors in the early century makes room, particularly in economic sciences, to the rising influence of the USA. This is a sign that an internationalisation of “excellence” has increasingly replaced an internationalisation of “proximity”.
topic Academic elites
Economics
Internationalization
Law
Switzerland
url http://journals.openedition.org/cres/2780
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AT andremach internationalisationdeselitesacademiquessuissesauxxesiecleconvergencesetcontrastes
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