探花视频

China seeks to keep Hong Kong close with mainland campuses

Greater Bay Area outposts offer more space, government funding and industry collaboration opportunities

Published on
October 26, 2020
Last updated
October 27, 2020
Guests watch a trailer on a giant screen during the opening ceremony of the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge
Source: Getty

Hong Kong鈥檚 universities are planning a聽string of new campuses in mainland China, opening up opportunities for more government funding and closer business ties.

Development is already under way for four campuses to be opened by The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), City University of Hong Kong (CityU), Hong Kong Polytechnic University and the Open University of Hong Kong in the Greater Bay Area, a government initiative to create a Silicon Valley-style technology hub linking Guangdong province with Hong Kong and Macao. The institutions will be following in the footsteps of the University of Hong Kong and the Chinese University of Hong Kong, which already have teaching hospitals and facilities on the mainland.

Universities in Hong Kong are running out of room for expansion in one of the world鈥檚 priciest and most densely populated cities, and operating on the other side of the border offers affordable space, as well as opportunities for industry collaboration.

However, political tensions remain, and Hong Kong鈥檚 young people have been wary of crossing the border, a situation exacerbated by police responses to聽protests last year and the passing of a controversial national security law this year.

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This is a situation that Xi聽Jinping, the Chinese leader, seems to be trying to rectify. During a speech in the city of Shenzhen on 14聽October, he said new measures should 鈥渇ully utilise the important platform of [regional] cooperation to attract more young people from Hong Kong and Macao to study, work and live in the mainland鈥. This would help to 鈥渂ring their hearts closer to the motherland鈥.

A few days after his speech, it was announced that Shenzhen would be given greater legal leeway in some areas, for example issuing visas for foreign talent.

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David Zweig, emeritus professor of social science at HKUST, said industry ties were 鈥渄efinitely better鈥 on the mainland. Campuses could tap into a聽market of 鈥渆xcellent students who do not have to travel to Hong Kong or get visas for Hong Kong, but can study while staying in the mainland鈥, he added.

If faculty are teaching on mainland campuses, 鈥渢hey can probably apply for mainland funding more easily鈥, Professor Zweig continued.

Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at SOAS University of London, told 探花视频 that 鈥渢he聽central issue is Xi鈥檚聽idea of聽bringing Hong Kong students closer to the mainland. Or, to put it more bluntly, Xi聽is trying to bring young people close to the 鈥榝atherland鈥 and learn to love聽it, rather than get 鈥榠ndoctrinated鈥 with ideas imported from the West.鈥

Hong Kong-branded campuses on the mainland must be set up as joint-venture universities, similar to foreign-branded schools such as NYU Shanghai and Duke Kunshan University. The general practice is for a mainland partner or municipality to underwrite the space and construction.

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CityU, which will establish a campus in the industrial city of Dongguan, potentially in 2023, 鈥渉as been planning on setting up a campus in the Greater Bay Area for a聽long time鈥, according to a spokesperson. The initial plan is to enrol a few thousand students, at both undergraduate and postgraduate level.

HKUST (Guangzhou) is set to open in 2022 in Guangdong鈥檚 provincial capital with postgraduate programmes. Longer-term plans are for the campus to include undergraduates and to grow to 10,000 students.

Wei Shyy, HKUST鈥檚 president, said 鈥渢he Greater Bay Area is a platform that can be used to strengthen cooperation with Shenzhen and other mainland cities, combining Hong Kong鈥檚 research talent with the industrial advantages of the mainland鈥.

joyce.lau@timeshighereducation.com

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