Emergence of Private Higher Education in Algeria: Actors and Pathways
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/eb-2022-0006Keywords:
Algeria, higher education, private higher education, PHES (private higher education system), trainingAbstract
Since gaining independence, the higher education sector in Algeria has undergone several reforms to fulfil the country’s requirements in terms of higher education, both to absorb the growing number of high-school graduates and meet the needs of the labour market. The emergence of a private higher education sector in Algeria has been slow in comparison to European countries, the United States, Japan and our culturally/historically-similar neighbouring countries (Tunisia and Morocco). This article reveals the results of research conducted on the context, governance and development of private higher education in Algeria. To achieve the objectives of our research, the study was conducted on five recently-accredited private higher education institutions through field observation, documentary analysis and interviews with executives, teachers and students at these institutions. The main results of the qualitative research suggest that private higher education continues to evolve through a transitional phase characterised by a gradual integration into the socio-economic framework of the country. Through these results, we contribute firstly on a theoretical and academic level by conducting the first research on the private sector of higher education in Algeria; secondly, on a practical level, by providing a clear and comprehensive view of the situation of the emerging private sector in Algeria.References
Aytenew, A. (2016). Private higher education in Ethiopia – Yesterday, today and tomorrow. LAP, Lambert Academic Publishing.
Berkane, Y. (2005). Le financement de l’enseignement supérieur en Algérie: Contraintes et perspectives. Human Science Journal, 16, 5–18.
Buckner, E. (2017). The worldwide growth of private higher education: Cross-national patterns of higher education institution foundings by sector. Sociology of Education, 90(4), 296–314. https://doi.org/10.1177/0038040717739613
Gerard, E. (2020). L’expansion de l’enseignement supérieur privé et le creusement des inégalités sociales (Working Paper c4fe396d-a68c-4cce-9d18-1). Agence française de développement, 1–44. https://ideas.repec.org/p/avg/wpaper/fr11579.html
Guèye, P. (2005). L’Enseignement supérieur en Afrique subsaharienne: des pistes pour une réforme. Dakar: UNESCO.
Hadijah, A. (2019). Transformation of higher education: A stakeholder perspectives in private islamic higher education institution (IPTIS) in Malaysia. HOLISTICA – Journal of Business and Public Administration, 10(1), 112–126. https://doi.org/10.2478/hjbpa-2019-0009
Lassassi, M., Lounici, N., Sami, L., Tidjani, C., & Benguerna, M. (2020). Université et enseignements face au COVID19: L’épreuve de l’enseignement à distance en Algérie. Les cahiers du CREAD, 36(3), 397–424.
Levy, D. C. (1986). Higher education and the state in Latin America : Private challenges to public dominance. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Marginson, S. (2007). The public/private divide in higher education: A global revision. Higher Education, 53, 307–333. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10734-005-8230-y
Mazzella, S. (2007). L’enseignement supérieur dans la mondialisation libérale: Une comparaison libérale (Maghreb, Afrique, Canada, France). Tunis: Institut de recherche sur le Maghreb contemporain.
Mazzella, S. (2009). La mondialisation étudiante. Le Maghreb entre Nord et Sud. Paris: Karthala Editions.
Mazzella, S. (2011). Construction d’un marché international de l’enseignement supérieur privé au Maghreb. In D. M. Leclerc-Olive, G. S. Ghellab, & A.-C. Wagner (Eds.), Les mondes universitaires face au marché : circulation des savoirs et pratiques des acteurs (pp. 105–116). Paris: Karthala.
MESRS. (2021, Dec. 16). Ministry of higher education and scientific research. Récupéré sur Ministry of higher education and scientific research. https://www.mesrs.dz/index.php/fr/accueil/
MESRS. (2020, Dec. 3). Universities and public schools: Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (Tunisia). http://www.mes.tn/?langue=fr
ENSSUP. (2020, Dec. 3). Ministry of National Education, Vocational Training Education and Scientific Research (Morocco). https://www.enssup.gov.ma/en
Neave, G. R., & van Vught, F. V. (1991). Prometheus Bound: The Changing Relationship Between Government and Higher Education in Western Europe. Pergamon Press.
Pusser, B. (2002). Higher education, the emerging market, and the public good. In The Knowledge Economy and Postsecondary Education: Report of a Workshop (pp. 105–125). National Academies Press.
Rabhi, M. (2021, Nov. 29). Liberte. Récupéré sur Liberte. https://www.libertealgerie.com/economie/le-salaire-moyen-en-algerie-stagne-sous-les-42-000-da-369065
Teixeira, P. (2009). Mass higher education and private institutions. In Higher education to 2030. Vol. 2, Globalization. OECD. https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264075375-en
Tilak, J. B. G. (1991). The privatization of higher education. Prospects, 21, 227–239. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02336063
UNESCO-UIS & OECD. (2005). Education Trends in Perspective : Analysis of the World Education Indicators. UNESCO, OECD.
Warasthe, R. (2018). The role of public-private partnerships in higher education how tertiary institutions in emerging economies benefit from public-private partnerships. In Balkan Region Conference on Engineering and Business Education, Romania, 1–7. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/322562595_The_Role_of_Public-Private_Partnerships_in_Higher_Education_How_Tertiary_Institutions_in_emerging_Economies_benefit_from_Public-Private_Partnerships
Williams, G. (1996). The many faces of privatisation. Higher Education Management, 8(3), 39–57.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Imad Eddine Bedaida et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.