Abstract

ABSTRACT Recent research has focused either on the internationalisation of China’s higher education (HE) as soft power, or on soft power with ‘Chinese characteristics’. There is a paucity of research combining these two foci. This paper fills this gap by: (i) unravelling the meanings and features of the ‘Chinese characteristics’ embodied in the policies of President Xi Jinping’s new regime that seeks to rejuvenate the ‘civilisational state’ through internationalising HE as soft power; (ii) analysing the implications and complications therein; and (iii) exploring the predicaments and paradoxes as China seeks to construct a Sino-centric world order alongside, if not atop, the Westphalian system. It demonstrates how the internationalisation of HE as soft power with ‘Chinese characteristics’: finds its legitimacy in a historico-cultural narrative; rides on the tide of the current global norms/practices; builds on national agenda/priorities; and is running into conflict with the West which is pursuing its own similar interests.

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