Amid all the political jockeying in the wake of Sinn F茅in鈥檚 breakthrough result in the Republic of Ireland鈥檚 general election on 8 February hangs the fate of the country鈥檚 beleaguered higher education sector.
While Miche谩l Martin鈥檚 Fianna F谩il party won the most seats, Sinn F茅in won the most first preference votes and seems likely to play a role in the next government 鈥 even if Martin and the current prime minister Leo Varadkar, the leader of Fine Gael, continue to聽express reluctance to work with it.
Just like in the UK, student numbers have been on the rise in Ireland over the past decade. But while universities in England were protected from austerity by the tripling of tuition fees, successive Irish governments have failed to provide Ireland鈥檚 universities 鈥 which could well hold the key to future prosperity 鈥 with the resources they need to cope with growth.
Cuts imposed during this period have inevitably taken a toll on the sector鈥檚 reputation 鈥 with increasing class sizes, dwindling funding streams and ageing campus facilities all adding up to a poorer student experience and plummeting international rankings. Trinity College Dublin is now the only Irish university in the top 200 of the 探花视频 2020 World University Rankings, after University College Dublin fell out of it in 2017, but it plummeted 44 places, from 120th聽to 164th聽place, in the latest rankings. As well as UCD, another four Irish institutions are in the top 500, while three more can lay claim only to being in the top 1,000.
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In 2016, political administrator and trade unionist Peter Cassells identified in a commissioned by the Irish government that increased investment would be needed to recover Ireland鈥檚 higher education and research potential. Yet, four years on, Irish universities are still struggling against underfunding.
That struggle has proved a saving grace for UK universities worried about the impact of Brexit. As a predominantly English-speaking country sharing a land border with the UK, one might have expected Ireland to rub its hands at the prospect of luring disaffected UK academics and hoovering up increased demand from EU students put off by the idea of making the UK their home. Yet, instead, Ireland found itself fearing that Brexit would leave Irish universities with the demand for English-language instruction from Erasmus students unless the EU was willing to put in place special compensatory measures to allow them to accept more students.
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Martin, who has a strong chance of becoming the new Taoiseach, has long advocated for Irish universities. Speaking at the Irish Universities Association鈥檚 inaugural 鈥溾 series last July, he said that Irish higher education is under 鈥渞eal pressure鈥, which is likely to get 鈥渕uch, much worse in the next decade unless we start acting now鈥. He suggested that the 鈥渃reation of a separate department of higher education and research might be the only way to guarantee both the real priority for this area and to provide strategic leadership鈥. The fact that Martin this pledge as part of his party鈥檚 general election campaign just last month is sure to get Irish university leaders excited.
However, Sinn F茅in has promised 鈥渁n 鈥, calling for greater north-south cooperation in research and development. While this may sound attractive, the effect may be that the party will resist the reforms in Northern Ireland that are desperately needed to allow the higher education sector there to flourish. Currently, the province鈥檚 two universities receive significantly less income per student than universities elsewhere in the UK and are unable to meet the domestic demand for places.
However, Sinn F茅in also sits in the Northern Ireland Executive, where it holds the important finance portfolio. It seems likely to resist any measures, such as an increase in , that would take Northern Ireland closer to England鈥檚 rather than Ireland鈥檚 funding model. Hence, Northern Irish institutions could find their ongoing battles for more resources聽tied up more than ever with political wrangling south of the border.
Diana Beech is head of government affairs at the University of Warwick. She was previously a policy adviser for three UK universities ministers.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Cross-border tenterhooks
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