Staff and students at the Central European University (CEU) want managers to reverse a聽decision to聽close a聽long-running refugee access programme, despite promises of聽a bigger successor.
A petition that calls for the 鈥淥live鈥 Open Learning Initiative to聽be revived and claims that its closure will hurt 鈥渢he most vulnerable people in聽Europe鈥 has been signed by聽more than 1,000 CEU students, staff and supporters. A聽protest was planned outside an聽extraordinary meeting of聽the university senate on 24聽February. Prem Kumar Rajaram, the initiative director, attended the meeting and expressed his opposition to the shutdown.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 understand why you need to kill one thing before setting up something else,鈥 Ian Cook, Olive鈥檚 former director of studies, told 探花视频. The CEU-trained anthropologist had his contract with the university ended without reason when the closure was announced. He said he had asked 15聽times why he had been let go. The university declined to comment on the decision.
Set up in 2015 in response to the Syrian refugee crisis, Olive has helped more than 1,000 refugees prepare for university, offering language training, free legal advice and a programme of weekend courses in academic subjects. It has been funded by Erasmus, the Open Society Foundation and the MacArthur Foundation, with top-ups from the university.
探花视频
Olive was left behind in Budapest when most of the university departed for Vienna in 2018, having faced persistent legal pressure from the Hungarian government. A subsequent law against non-governmental organisations that assist refugees forced the university to spin Olive out as a separate legal entity.
The European Association of Social Anthropologists the CEU鈥檚 rector, Shalini Randeria, saying it is 鈥渧ery concerned about the lack of transparency鈥 around Olive鈥檚 closure. A confidential evaluation by the initiative鈥檚 penultimate funder, the CEU-linked Open Society University Network (Osun), recommended that the university set up a broader programme that matched its new home in Vienna and scaled up the number students it could handle.
探花视频
鈥淥ur priority is to build our university here in Vienna, and because of that we are creating a new access programme,鈥 said Tim Crane, the CEU鈥檚 pro聽rector for teaching and learning. While a CEU task force has been set up to decide the 鈥渕ore integrated鈥 replacement鈥檚 final form, Professor Crane said it would cater for first-generation and Roma students, as well as those from outside Europe.
The bigger initiative could involve other universities in Osun, such as online learning leader Arizona State University, he said. While the CEU had an 鈥渙pen mind鈥 about delivery, it was 鈥渄efinitely interested鈥 in including online components.
Both Professor Crane and Dr Cook agreed that a bigger, broader access programme made sense, and that an online-only approach would not work. 鈥淲e鈥檙e committed to have a new programme which will have some continuity鈥nd be open to the same constituency,鈥 said Professor Crane.
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