Browse the full?Times Higher Education?Asia-Pacific University?Rankings 2018 results
The tectonic plates of global higher education are shifting.¡± That was the message from Ian Jacobs, president of the University of New South Wales in Sydney, when Times Higher Education launched the first THE Asia-Pacific University Rankings last year. Our data continue to provide evidence for his assertion.
In the 2018 THE World University Rankings, published in September 2017, some 71 universities from Japan made an appearance in our top 1,000 list. Also making the running were 60 universities from China, 26 from Taiwan and six from Hong Kong. South Korea had 27 representatives in the table. That number of regional entrants is quite an accomplishment, but perhaps even more impressive is the fact that the increased quantity is in general being matched with improving quality. China, for example, had two universities in the global top 30 for the first time, and other leading national institutions improved their performance and climbed up the rankings.
There is no doubt that East Asia, and the wider Asia-Pacific area, has well and truly emerged as a new global powerhouse for higher education and research.
One academic who recently left Australia for a position in China has experienced this profound shift for himself. When he arrived at Beijing¡¯s Tsinghua University from the University of Melbourne in Australia, the higher education professor Hamish Coates got a feeling that he was at the ¡°epicentre¡± of global higher education.
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¡°There¡¯s enormous governmental, public and cultural support,¡± he tells THE. ¡°Within Beijing alone, there are dozens of universities doing first-rate work. You cannot live here without being affected by that, because the commitment to education and progress is so palpable.¡±
It is this tangible commitment to education ¨C backed by serious investment and political will ¨C that convinced THE to produce an Asia-Pacific ranking.
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While our more established Asia University Rankings rightly cover the entire continent of Asia in all its glorious but stark diversity (covering the increasingly influential universities of the far west of Asia, those in the Gulf, as well as the struggling but strengthening Central and South Asian institutions), these newer rankings focus directly on the most dynamic and most closely watched region for research and innovation ¨C Asia-Pacific, covering East Asia, the Asean countries, as well as their neighbours Australia and New Zealand.
As the world increasingly looks to this region for investment, innovation and inspiration, THE is delighted to bring its rich data on the region into closer focus.
<ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ class="p1">Countries represented in the Asia-Pacific University Rankings 2018ÁñÁ«ÊÓƵ>
Country/region |
Number of institutions |
Top institution |
Rank |
Japan |
89 |
12 |
|
China |
63 |
2 |
|
Australia |
35 |
4 |
|
Taiwan |
31 |
National Taiwan University |
37 |
South Korea |
27 |
14 |
|
Thailand |
10 |
101¨C110 |
|
Malaysia |
9 |
61 |
|
New Zealand |
8 |
=27 |
|
Hong Kong |
6 |
5 |
|
Indonesia |
4 |
191¨C200 |
|
Singapore |
2 |
1 |
|
Macao |
1 |
=62 |
|
Philippines |
1 |
151¨C160 |
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