Higher education policy
Higher education policy refers to education policy for higher education institutions such as universities, specifically how they are organised, funded, and operated in a society. According to Ansell there are "three different institutional forms of higher education provision: the Anglo-Saxon, Continental and the Scandinavian education system."
Higher Education Policy Observatory
The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) released the in December 2023. This online platform gathers information on national higher education systems in 146 countries from all world regions. It contains around 40 indicators related to 8 dimensions of higher education policy:- Governance structures of higher education systems,
- Legislative frameworks regulating higher education,
- higher education quality assurance,
- higher education system planning,
- key principles for access to higher education,
- Gratuity of public higher education,
- Admission pathways to higher education,
- Recognition of foreign qualifications related to higher education.
Higher Education Funding Policy
The funding of higher education is contingent on the internal resources and policies enacted within the country of study. The Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD) uses knowledge gathered by the Higher Education Policy Team to compare the funding of higher education in the 38 countries that are affiliated with this international organization. In accordance to the Higher Education Resources Policy Survey conducted by OECD there are four main channels that contribute to higher education resource funding: Student Support, Institutional Funding, Resource Governance and Coordination, and Human Resources. In non-OECD countries such as Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Namibia, and others the framework pertaining to higher education resources are commonly indisposed due to Resource and Government Coordination in developing countries which hinders the implementation of a successful financial system for higher education.External funding is an alternative method for funding higher education that results from the globalization of higher education. Some countries are able to consistently secure external funding from other countries as a competitive bid for prestige of higher education systems. A case study in Israel shows exceptional achievement in securing grant funding from the European Research Council achieved through a regulated funding system that rewards performance in order to attract external funding in the form of research grants. However, performance based funding policies are associated with the marketization of higher education which encourages higher education institutions to embrace neoliberal behaviors that are market-oriented.