This book presents accounts of the repositioning of higher education institutions across a range of contexts in the East and the West. It argues that global governance, institutional organisation and academic practice are complementary elements within the process of institutional repositioning. While systems, institutions and individuals in the different contexts are subjected to similar global trends and pressures, the reorientation of higher education takes diverse forms as a result of the particularities of those contexts. That reorientation cannot be explained in terms of East-West dichotomies and divisions, but only with reference to the interflow across and within systems. Globalisation necessitates complex interconnectivities of regionality, culture and geopolitics that this book explores in relation to specific cases and contexts. This book presents accounts of the repositioning of higher education institutions across a range of contexts in the East and West. It argues that global governance, institutional organisation and academic practice are complementary elements within the process.List of Tables.- List of Figures.- Acknowledgements.- Notes on Style.- Preface; Bob Adamson, Jon Nixon and Feng Su.- PART I: Introduction.- 1. Comparative Education and the Reorientation of Higher Education; Bob Adamson, Jon Nixon and Feng Su.-? PART II: Supra-national Reorientations.- 2. Drivers of Reforms in Higher Education; N.V. Varghese.- 3. Higher Education in Small States; Michaela Martin and Mark Bray.- PART III: Regional Reorientations.- 4. Dilemmas of Reform in Indian Higher Education; Fazal Rizvi.- 5. How Hong Kong Universities Balance the Global and the Regional; Anthony B.L. Cheung.- 6. Challenges of Transnational Higher Education in China; Ka Ho Mok and David K.K. Chan.- 7. Sino-African Relations and the Internationalisation of Chil“r