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Call to tear up liberal arts courses to tackle global challenges

President of Lebanese American University explains how refugee focus has made interdisciplinary courses more relevant and engaging

Published on
November 29, 2022
Last updated
June 5, 2025
Michel Mawad

Rewriting liberal arts programmes to focus on global challenges will improve graduate employability and student engagement, according to the head of a university in Lebanon聽that applied its interdisciplinary programmes to the country鈥檚 refugee crisis.

While many universities have begun to centre their research around the United Nations鈥 17 Sustainable Development Goals, which include clean water, quality education and smart cities, few institutions have remodelled undergraduate courses around the wide-ranging development goals.

However, Michel Mawad, who was appointed president of the Lebanese American University in October 2020, said numerous crises faced by his country in recent years, including Covid and the聽 in August 2020, had persuaded him to take the radical step of remodelling liberal arts courses towards more practical ends.

However, the 1.5 million Syrian refugees hosted by Lebanon since the start of the civil war in 2011 posed a significant challenge that could not be ignored, Professor Mawad, a neurosurgeon, told聽探花视频鈥檚 MENA Universities Summit.

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鈥淭here are a lot of refugees with a lot of problems 鈥 we need to get involved as they deserve our attention as much as anyone else,鈥 Professor Mawad told an audience at the American University of the Middle East in Kuwait.

This year the university revamped its聽liberal arts and sciences programme聽to 鈥渃apture the spirit of the major problems that our world is facing鈥, which he said would include 鈥渓ife-changing electives鈥 with refugee camps, and curricula and projects involving providing clean water, vaccination and aid distribution, explained Professor Mawad.

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The pedagogic reform would be beneficial for refugees but also the quality of education received by students, he told聽THE.

鈥淪tudying history and literature on a liberal arts programme may be excellent in educational terms but it鈥檚 not enough anymore 鈥 we鈥檝e seen graduates from these types of programmes all across the world struggle to get professional jobs,鈥 he said.

鈥淲e have so many problems that we are trying to address 鈥 bringing civic engagement and liberal arts together in this way makes sense,鈥 added Dr Mawad, whose university was founded almost 100 years ago, and is accredited by US authorities.

The new programme has been led by the dean of arts and sciences, Cathia Jenainati, who moved to Lebanon in 2019 after founding the University of Warwick鈥檚 School for Cross-Faculty Studies four years earlier.

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鈥淪he said, 鈥楨nough with this 鈥 we need to be more relevant and inclusive鈥, and it鈥檚 been a big success,鈥 said Professor Mawad, who explained that he had also begun to reform other parts of the university to encourage more interactions with society and industry.

鈥淚鈥檝e redrawn the intellectual property rules so they favour industry, which will get the lion鈥檚 share [of any future income] but we will get some,鈥 he said, adding: 鈥淵ou cannot get companies interested in academia unless there is some benefit for them.鈥

Professor Mawad, who spent 40 years working in university hospitals in New York and Houston before returning to the Middle East, said he was keen to build innovation centres on campus, partly to encourage students to engage with industry earlier.

鈥淥ur students are starting to work with industry at a very early stage, even in their first year 鈥 we want that experiential learning to start very early,鈥 he said.

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jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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