Citizenship, nation-building and identity in the EU: The contribution of Erasmus student mobility

Cherry James

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

With Brexit looming, a major issue facing UK Higher Education is whether the UK will be able to stay in the Erasmus Programme. This book sits at the intersection of three main interrelated themes - EU citizenship, the current state of the university in Europe, and student mobility - as they play out in the context of an EU funded programme established not least to promote European identity, European consciousness and European citizenship. Exploring through interviews with students from many countries, this book weaves together the themes of citizenship creation as a device for building a nation and a polity, the university as a public space in the era of the marketization of higher education, and communicative interaction as the mechanism by which citizenship is created. Ultimately it asks if the building bricks of national citizenship can be transposed to the transnational scale, and assist in creating the transnational, EU citizenship. It finds, surprisingly, that far from encouraging and facilitating the communicative interaction on which the development of EU citizenship was postulated, central features of the Erasmus Programme inadvertently work against this outcome.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationUK
PublisherCRC Press
Number of pages256
Edition1
Publication statusPublished - 10 Jan 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Multilingualism
  • European universities
  • European identity
  • EU citizenship
  • Lingua franca
  • Brexit
  • Erasmus student mobility

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Citizenship, nation-building and identity in the EU: The contribution of Erasmus student mobility'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this