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Keep freedom of movement for academics post-Brexit, says Willetts

Former universities minister says researchers deserve same guarantee as bankers

Published on
October 21, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
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The UK government should protect freedom of movement for academics when the country leaves the European Union, former universities minister Lord Willetts said.

The intervention came after Philip Hammond, the UK鈥檚 chancellor, suggested that senior bankers would be on Continental migration. Any restrictions would 鈥渇acilitate movement of highly skilled people between financial institutions and businesses鈥, Mr Hammond told a House of Lords committee.

Lord Willetts told 探花视频 that the university sector deserved to get a similar guarantee.

鈥淚t would be great if we heard a real priority being given to the movement of academic staff,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had the chancellor talking about how important it is that bankers can move between the City and the EU; it鈥檚 equally important that academics and researchers can move easily between Britain and the EU.鈥

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Lord Willetts said that it would 鈥渢ake years鈥 for the full impact of Brexit on the UK higher education sector to become clear, but argued that the treatment of Switzerland鈥檚 access to Horizon 2020 research funding following its decision to restrict freedom of movement would likely be a 鈥渧ery important indicator鈥 of how negotiations might progress.



The peer added that UK universities鈥 future links to the EU would need to be the subject of 鈥渟ome very creative thinking鈥, with potential options involving joining 鈥 and paying into 鈥 Horizon 2020, or 鈥渞unning a parallel structure alongside it鈥.

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Lord Willetts told THE that ministers should see higher education as 鈥渙ne of the top half-dozen issues鈥 in the Brexit negotiations, but added that universities needed to do more to ensure that their demands are addressed.

In particular, he suggested that institutions should look to build stronger links with universities beyond the EU, for example, in Commonwealth nations, the Gulf and North America.

鈥淪howing that universities understand that something changed on 23 June and that they are responding to that, I think, is a good way of being listened to by government,鈥 Lord Willetts said.

鈥淎t that point I think ministers will be more responsive if universities say 鈥榳e鈥檙e doing all this to build networks and soft power outside the EU but it would also be great if you could negotiate vigorously and have us high on the list of priorities for your negotiations with the EU鈥.鈥

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Lord Willetts was speaking during the THE World Academic Summit, held at the University of California, Berkeley last month.聽

chris.havergal@tesglobal.com

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