“…Alberts and Hazen, ; Sidhu, ; Altbach and Knight, ; Olds, ; Brooks and Waters, ; Findlay et al ., ), much of this work has focused on international student mobility, to the neglect of other ‘types’ of internationalisation, including TNE. There has been a great deal of interest in internationally mobile students and the implications of their experiences for issues such as racialisation (Collins, ; Abelmann, ; Park, ), class reproduction (Waters and Brooks, ; Findlay et al ., ), post‐colonialism (Madge et al ., ) and Europeanisation (King and Ruiz‐Gelices, ). To date, however, this interest has not extended to include ‘non‐mobile international students’ – those undertaking TNE programmes for whom obtaining an ‘international education’ may involve no mobility whatsoever.…”