“…However, since the COVID-19 pandemic there are signs in Vietnamese universities of an emergent ‘place-based’ internationalisation (Phùng and Phan 2021: 252) which brings glocalisation more to the fore through ‘commitments related to local/community engagement, student wellbeing, and care’. Through policies, curriculum design guidelines and professional development, institutional m anagement of language will need to play a large part in this transformation, replacing the inertia and neglect of recent years (Nguyen et al, 2017), where staff have been given incentives to engage in EME but not guided by clear policy nor provided with targeted professional development (Macaro et al, 2020; Pham and Doan 2020), and where students have often been insufficiently supported to develop their English proficiency for academic and specific disciplinary purposes (Arnbjörnsdóttir, 2017; Lin and Lei, 2021; Tran and Hoang, 2019). Across Vietnam, students as agents in EME bring with them diverse and often limited levels of both general and academic English proficiency, making it difficult for them to access the curriculum effectively and to learn through English (Phuong and Nguyen 2019a; Sahan et al, 2022).…”