Higher education and Brexit: current European perspectives

Author (Person)
Publisher
Series Details February 2018
Publication Date February 2018
ISBN 978-0-9955538-1-1
ISSN 2398-564X
Content Type

UK universities were likely to suffer because of Brexit while German universities might benefit, according to a report Higher education and Brexit: current European perspectives published in February 2018 from the Centre for Global Higher Education (CGHE).

The report found that since the June 2016 referendum result, European academics were less likely to seek UK partners as leaders on collaborative research bids.

Germany emerged as a significant potential ‘winner’ from Brexit, with countries in both northern and eastern Europe planning to reinforce their existing partnerships with German universities. There was also a reluctance from some European academics to involve UK partners in research bids at all.

Further information

'The report reveals a mixture of anxiety and hope. Our findings indicate that while the UK is an extremely important player in European research and higher education, it is not as central as Germany. Germany is currently the top research collaborator for 19 European countries and the second top collaborator for seven countries. By contrast, the UK is the top collaborator for only one country (Germany) and the second top for nine countries' said Dr Aline Courtois (UCL Institute of Education).

The UK’s strong position in European higher education and the market orientation of UK universities also created imbalances and tensions in its relationships with other partners, according to the report. Nonetheless, participants in all the countries studied valued UK academics’ role in leading research consortia and saw the participation of their UK partners as essential to many of their research projects.

The loss of the UK as an academic exchange partner was a concern for countries sending significant numbers of students to the UK. On the other hand, for countries where universities offer tuition in English, the departure of the UK from the EU was seen as an opportunity for increasing incoming numbers.

Participants in some of the countries studied suggested Brexit might provide an opportunity to ‘poach’ high-profile UK-based academics and funds. Yet many participants were more concerned with finding ways of maintaining cooperation and expressing solidarity with their UK colleagues.

UK-based academics feared waves of restructurings and redundancies and loss of funding in the wake of Brexit. The report suggests that Brexit will have a very unequal impact across the different nations of the UK, on different types of university and across disciplines. This concern was echoed in other countries as well.

There was also a widespread fear of a net loss of early-career academic positions, not only in the UK but also across the EU, as many of these positions are funded by research grants held with UK partners.

All the countries studied in the report expressed fear not only that the quality and reputation of European research would suffer with the UK’s departure from Europe, but that Brexit posed a threat to the European project at large.

The report was based on a series of interviews with academic staff, university leaders and policymakers in higher education across 10 European countries between April and November 2017.

The Centre for Global Higher Education (CGHE)

The Centre for Global Higher Education (CGHE) is a research partnership of international universities, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) and based at the UCL Institute of Education.

CGHE’s research is focused on higher education and its futur
development and aims to inform and improve higher education policy and practice.

CGHE’s three research programmes integrate local, national and global perspectives, and its researchers are based in nine countries across five continents: Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia and North America.

Source Link http://www.researchcghe.org/publications/higher-education-and-brexit-current-european-perspectives/
Related Links
CGHE: Policy Briefing, No.2, July 2017: Brexit and the issues facing UK higher education http://www.researchcghe.org/publications/Brexit-and-the-issues-facing-UK-higher-education/
Universities UK, 2018: Briefing note on continued higher education and research collaboration through European Union programmes (et al) http://www.europeansources.info/record/briefing-note-on-continued-higher-education-and-research-collaboration-through-european-union-programmes/
ESO: In Focus: Brexit - The United Kingdom and the European Union http://www.europeansources.info/record/brexit-the-united-kingdom-and-the-european-union/
CGHE: Policy Briefing, No.3, November 2017: Creating a new relationship in research, science and innovation with the EU http://www.researchcghe.org/publications/creating-a-new-relationship-in-research-science-and-innovation-with-the-eu/
UCL European Institute: Blog, 06.04.18: Brexit: German Universities among those Poised to Benefit if Researchers and Funding Shift https://ucl-brexit.blog/2018/04/06/brexit-german-universities-among-those-poised-to-benefit-if-researchers-and-funding-shift/
In Facts, 15.08.18: Brexit will rewrite UK universities’ success story https://infacts.org/brexit-will-rewrite-uk-universities-success-story/

Subject Categories
Countries / Regions ,