Tertiary scholarship schemes as institutionalised migration of highly skilled labou: The mixed evidence of development effectiveness from the Czech Republic
Abstract
Providing scholarships has become an integral part of the global higher
education and so has research on its impacts. This article examines the
tertiary scholarship scheme of the Czech government for providing
scholarships to students from the global South as a part of its development
cooperation programme with a double goal. Firstly, it examines the
programme’s development effectiveness from the perspective of migration
studies, and secondly, it investigates the underlying motivation factors
which influence the students’ decisions on where they will stay after their
studies. A survey among students and graduates of the scheme was
triangulated with quantitative data obtained from official sources. The
results show a mean values of 45 percent for brain gain, meaning that
almost half of the graduates do return back home after their studies, yet
this situation is aggravated by a significant share of brain waste. The major
factors that influence students’ migration decisions were established to be
economic factors, the utility of the studies and the ease or difficulty with
which they can find jobs in their home countries.
Keywords
brain drain, brain gain, scholarship schemes, migration, high-skilled labour, development effectiveness, development cooperation
Author Biography
Jiří Hejkrlík
Jíří Hejkrlík, born in 1976, is Vice-Dean for Education and Quality at the Faculty of
Tropical AgriSciences at the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague. He
specialises in the quality assurance of higher education and capacity
building of higher educational institutions in Eastern Europe and Central
Asia. He is also a member of the Department of Economics and
Development, where he focusses on international agricultural
development.
Ondřej Horký-Hlucháň
Ondřej Horký-Hlucháň, born in 1980, is Senior Researcher at the Institute of International Relations Prague. His research has focussed mostly on development cooperation policies in Central and Eastern Europe. Currently he is a Visiting Researcher at the International Institute of Social Studies (ISS) in The Hague, where he
has worked on research dealing with policy coherence for sustainable
development.
Tereza Němečková
Tereza Němečková, born in 1979, is Deputy Head of the Department of International Business at Metropolitan University Prague. Her research interests cover the
economic development of Africas with a special focus on the measuring
and rise of income inequalities (the middle class/poverty) and human
development. She also has a special interest in Morocco.