Western universities truly looking to spread equity can now find developing-world partners increasingly capable of making productive use of substantial alliances, academics across the geographic divide are finding.
An early example involves the University of Toronto, which聽聽in 2003 that now sends dozens of its teaching staff every year to provide medical and academic training at Addis Ababa University.
That has helped produce more than 250 medical professionals in Ethiopia, who in turn have helped staff in 聽in their impoverished country.
It was clear evidence, said Joseph Wong, vice-president, international at Toronto, that Western institutions with a mission of service can make deeply meaningful contributions overseas.
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Successful universities in the 21st century must look beyond what they have long regarded as their 鈥減eer鈥 institutions, Professor Wong told聽探花视频鈥檚聽World Academic Summit.
鈥淭hat means building partnerships with diverse institutions, with institutions that don鈥檛 look like ours, that bring to the table different kinds of resources,鈥 said Professor Wong, a professor of innovation and political science at Toronto.
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The help was vital, said Addis Ababa鈥檚 president, Tassew Woldehanna. The institution runs more than 100 doctoral programmes, Professor Woldehanna told the聽THE聽summit, and absolutely needed the outside help to handle the numbers of students who are willing and able to do the necessary work.
On its own, said Professor Woldehanna, a professor of economics, 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have enough instructors to run more programmes.鈥
The Covid crisis made the deficiencies even worse, leaving Addis Ababa capable of serving only 40 per cent of its students for eight months, Professor Woldehanna said. 鈥淭here is huge inequality among these people,鈥 he said of his students.
Other major international academic partnerships aimed at tackling social challenges include the聽, a mix of several dozen campuses in developed and developing nations.
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This year the 听产测 Northwestern University and its associate provost of global affairs, Annelise Riles, a professor of law and anthropology who saw obstacles more within Western institutions than across foreign borders.
Faculty often were eager to聽help their colleagues聽in low-income nations, Professor Riles told the聽THE聽summit, but struggle with the campus politics. 鈥淭he harder piece is to grow those coalitions internally,鈥 she said.
For that, said G眉l 陌nan莽, co-director of the Centre for Asia Pacific Refugee Studies at the University of Auckland, more external motivations may be needed.
One important goal set forth by the United Nations involves聽聽the share of young聽refugees worldwide studying in college, Dr 陌nan莽 said. The actual figure remains stuck at about 3 per cent, she told the聽THE听蝉耻尘尘颈迟.
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Public awareness of which universities were being most helpful with such problems, including institutional rankings that give weight to socially beneficial accomplishments, could drive progress, Dr 陌nan莽 said.
鈥淭his will lead them to look and reflect on what they鈥檙e currently doing,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd how can they do better.鈥
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