Nigel Healey
Nigel Healey | |
---|---|
Born | Royal Naval Hospital Haslar |
Nationality | New Zealand, United Kingdom |
Occupation | Professor |
Website | http://fnu.academia.edu/NigelHealey |
Professor Nigel Healey is vice chancellor of Fiji National University. Prior to taking up his appointment, Dr Healey was pro-vice-chancellor] (international) and head of the College of Business, Law and Social Sciences at Nottingham Trent University (2011-16) and an adjunct professor at Sichuan University (2013-16). He has served as pro-vice-chancellor and dean at the College of Business and Economics at the University of Canterbury (2004–11) in New Zealand and dean of Manchester Metropolitan University Business School in the UK (2000–04). His current research interests are in the internationalization of higher education, transnational education and higher education policy and management.[1] Healey has served as an economic policy advisor to the prime minister of Belarus and the deputy minister of economy of the Russian Federation and managed a number of multinational research and economic development projects in different parts of the world.
He is chair of the Quacquarelli Symonds Asia-Pacific Professional Leaders in Education (QS-APPLE) academic conference committee, which organises a major international education conference each year across the region. Healey holds a BA (Hons.) Economics from the University of Nottingham, an MA Economics from the University of Leeds, an MBA from the University of Warwick and a DBA from the University of Bath. He is a Fellow of the Chartered Management Institute and the New Zealand Institute of Management and a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy.
He has served terms as a member of the Board of Trustees for the UK Council for International Student Affairs (UKCISA) (2013-16) and the Council of the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service (UCAS) (2013-16), a director for the Australia and New Zealand Academy of Management (2008–11) and the Chartered Association of Business Schools (2002–04) and was a member of the National Management Committee for the Chartered Management Institute (2002–04). He was a member of the Universities New Zealand Committee on International Policy (2008–09). He is a citizen of New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
Papers and reports
- Healey, N. (2015), Managing international branch campuses: what do we know?, Higher Education Quarterly, DOI: 10.111/hequ.12082
- Healey, N. (2015), The challenges of leading an international branch campus: the ‘lived experience’ of in-country senior managers, Journal of Studies in International Education, DOI: 10.1177/1028315315602928
- Healey, N. (2014) When is an international branch campus?, International Higher Education, 78, 22-23
- Healey, N. and Bordogna, C. (2014), From transnational to multinational education: emerging trends in international higher education. Internationalisation of Higher Education, 3, 34-56
- Healey, N. and Michael, L. (2014), Towards a new framework for analysing transnational education, Higher Education Policy, DOI:10.1057/hep.2014.17
- Healey, N. (2014), Towards a risk-based typology for transnational education, Higher Education, DOI: 10.1007/s10734-014-9757-6
- Healey, N. (2013), Is UK transnational education “one of Britain’s great growth industries of the future”?, Higher Education Review, 45(3), 6-35
- Healey, N. (2013), Why do English universities really franchise degrees to overseas providers?, Higher Education Quarterly, 67(2), 180-200
- Healey, N. and Gunby, P. (2012), The impact of recent government tertiary education policies on access to higher education in New Zealand, Journal of Education Leadership, Policy and Policy, 27(1), 29-45
- Gunby, P. and Healey, N. (2012), New Zealand, in The impact of economic crisis on higher education, UNESCO, 87-100
- Healey, N. (2011), The 2010 and 2011 Canterbury Earthquakes and organisational learning at the University of Canterbury: does practice make perfect?, Journal of Management and Organization, 17(6), 850-856
- Healey, N. (2008), Is higher education in really internationalising?, Higher Education, 55 (3), 333-355