



Copenhagen Business School rector Johan Roos resigned last weekend following a failed merger fiasco, a NEWS item reports.
Hong Kong and Southern China are already forging higher education ties with a view to creating a common higher education space in the not-too distant future. See the FEATURE article.
Boston University's CSTE aims to understand the effects of repetitive head trauma on professional athletes. See the FEATURES section for more.
New research compares gender, power and managerialism within higher education institutions in Australia, South Africa and Portugal. See the COMMENTARY article.

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University World News was a media partner to the OECD’s Institutional Management in Higher Education Conference in 2010, and to the Unesco World Conference on Higher Education in 2009. |
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In Features, YOJANA SHARMA describes growing higher education ties between mainland China and Hong Kong, and ALISON MOODIE reports on research at Boston University into head trauma injuries using the donated brains of athletes. In People, SHARON DELL interviews South African novelist and former vice-chancellor Njabulo Ndebele, and GEOFF MASLEN profiles Bob Birrell, a much-quoted academic whose journal has fallen victim to the Excellence in Research for Australia Initiative. In Commentary, KEVIN DOWNING writes that rankings are enabling Asian universities to emerge from the long shadows cast by those in the West, AREVIK OHANYAN argues that the Bologna process has not accommodated the shared history and soc ialist legacies of post-communist states, and KATE WHITE, TERESA CARVALHO and SARAH RIORDAN argue that new managerialism in universities is having a negative impact on women’s ability to climb the career ladder.
NEWS: Our correspondents worldwide report |
COLOMBIA: Students resist liberalisation plans Pacifica Goddard
University students across Colombia are planning a large protest next week over their government’s plans to reform the country’s higher education sector and allow universities to become for-profit institutions. The proposals seek to expand high education by 608,000 places, to achieve 50% enrolment of undergraduate-age Colombians. Full report on the University World News site
INDIA: Medical education may be cut from foreign bill Alya Mishra
India’s Health Ministry and the Medical Council of India have together opposed the government’s proposed Foreign Educational Institutions Bill to allow and regulate foreign universities in India, refusing to support the landmark legislation that is being closely watched around the world. Full report on the University World News site
GLOBAL: Strong science in Iran, Tunisia, Turkey Yojana Sharma and Wagdy Sawahel
Iran, Tunisia and Turkey are among a number of countries beginning to challenge the dominance of established powerhouses of scientific research, according to a major new report that has identified rapidly emerging nations “not traditionally associated with a strong science base”. Full report on the University World News site
GERMANY: Draft legislation recognises foreign degrees Michael Gardner
With fears mounting over a shortage of spec ialists to fuel Germany’s economic boom, the government has approved draft legislation on the recognition of qualifications and degrees that immigrants have acquired abroad. New regulations would make it much easier for many professionals to find jobs in their respective fields. Full report on the University World News site
UKRAINE: Number of universities to be reduced Eugene Vorotnikov
The number of higher education institutions in Ukraine may be significantly cut in the coming years under an initiative by the Ukrainian government. The reduction will take place in accordance with a new higher education law, which is expected to be adopted by parliament within the next few months. Full report on the University World News site
DENMARK: Rector resigns over business school fiasco Ard Jongsma
Copenhagen Business School Rector Johan Roos tendered his resignation and was sent home last weekend as it emerged that a merger between his institution and private MBA provider SIMI was in conflict with Danish university legislation. The merger had been carried out prematurely, anticipating approval, despite the rector’s knowledge that it was contestable. Current MBA students risk ending up with an expensive degree without the accreditation so critical in the world of MBAs. Full report on the University World News site
AUSTRALIA: No place for People and Place Geoff Maslen
The final edition of one of Australia’s most oft-quoted academic journals has just been published. The controversial founder of People and Place, Dr Bob Birrell, used his final editorial to savage the federal government’s Excellence in Research for Australia initiative, which he believes has led to the journal’s demise and is affecting academics in the humanities and social sciences. Full report on the University World News site Read a profile of Bob Birrell in the People section
SINGAPORE: Yale tie-up to proceed despite controversy Adele Yung
After months of controversy and deliberations over funding, the National University of Singapore and Yale University last week announced that they will establish a new autonomous Yale-NUS college within two years as Singapore’s first liberal arts college based on the US model. Full report on the University World News site
FRANCE: Projects and campuses ‘of excellence’ chosen Jane Marshall
The first 100 projects selected for funding under the government’s ‘Labex’ (Laboratories of Excellence) programme have been announced, together with a preliminary shortlist of seven university federations for ‘Idex’ (Initiatives of Excellence) status, part of a plan to create internationally competitive centres of higher education and research. Full report on the University World News site
GULF STATES: Virtual universities on the rise Wagdy Sawahel
E-universities are proliferating in the Gulf States with a number of new projects aimed at improved technology transfer, narrowing the digital divide and facilitating access to knowledge. Full report on the University World News site
ZIMBABWE: Parliament wants fair student loan scheme Kudzai Mashininga
Zimbabwe’s parliament has recommended an overhaul of higher education including depoliticising the country’s student cadet loan system and placing a controversial presidential scholarship scheme under a government department rather than in the hands of loyalists of President Robert Mugabe. Full report on the University World News site
ROMANIA: Diversified university system on track The European University Association is to collaborate with the Romanian Ministry of Education and universities in the country to support the implementation of a major new higher education reform bill that came into force last month. Full report on the University World News site
CHINA-HONG KONG: Thorny issues of higher education ties Yojana Sharma
One of the little-publicised sections of China’s economic plan for the next five years includes Hong Kong for the first time since the former British colony’s handover to China in 1997. However, Hong Kong and Southern China have already been forging higher education ties with a view to creating a common higher education space in the not-too distant future. Full report on the University World News site
US: Trauma centre studies donated brains of athletes Alison Moodie
Dave Duerson, a former professional football player, committed suicide in February. His last request was that his brain be donated to Boston University’s brain bank. With the knowledge that his injured brain would offer some answers to his deteriorating mental health, he made sure to shoot himself in the chest. Duerson is one of hundreds of athletes pledging their brains and spinal cord tissue to the Center for the Study of Traumatic Encephalopathy, CSTE. Full report on the University World News site
SOUTH AFRICA: Njabulo Ndebele on labels and leadership In an interview with SHARON DELL, South African writer and former vice-chancellor of three universities Njabulo Ndebele highlights the limitations of absolutes and the fine line between universities and the society in which they are located. Full report on the University World News site
AUSTRALIA: Bob Birrell, controversial but determined Geoff Maslen
For someone who has been at the centre of storms of controversy for two decades, Dr Bob Birrell seems remarkably placid. Likewise People and Place, the journal he and colleagues at Monash University’s Centre for Population and Urban Research have produced four times a year for the past 18 years, seems a modest, octavo-sized publication. Yet the magazine and its unassuming publisher have probably generated more heated discussions about immigration, population and a host of other topical issues than any other such venture in the country. Full report on the University World News site
HERANA – Universities and development in Africa |
AFRICA: Coordination and connectedness of universities While African governments coordinate higher education at the national level, this is largely “symbolic” and most ministries do not have effective steering mechanisms, a three-year study of universities in eight African countries has found. This, along with lack of coordination of and connectedness to external groups, is undermining the potential of universities to contribute to economic development. Full report on the University World News site
GLOBAL: Rankings bring Asia out of the shadows The benefits of rankings in encouraging international competition have been neglected as universities focus on the system itself, argues KEVIN DOWNING. He says that while rankings are necessarily imperfect, they are also creating the opportunity for many Asian institutions to emerge from the long shadows cast by those in the West. Full report on the University World News site
EUROPE: The Bologna process in the post-Soviet world The effects of the Bologna process on the post-Soviet world have been treated insufficiently by policy-makers and researchers, argues AREVIK OHANYAN in the current issue of International Higher Education. The Bologna process is poorly positioned to accommodate the shared history of post-communist states and their soc ialist legacies. Full report on the University World News site
GLOBAL: Gender, power and managerialism in universities The new managerialism in universities is having a negative impact on women’s ability to climb up the career ladder, argue KATE WHITE, TERESA CARVALHO and SARAH RIORDAN. Their research shows that while women as senior managers have more of an impact on decision-making in managerialist universities, this is mainly related to ‘soft’ management skills which are not valued in a ‘male’ managerial culture that is strongly focused on research output. Full report on the University World News site
GLOBAL: Academic freedom reports from around the world Noemi Bouet*
Members of a student group in South Korea have been arrested and accused of violating national security by openly supporting North Korea. There has been a furore in the US over a request by the Republican Party for copies of emails of history professor William Cronon, after he wrote articles critical of the party in Wisconsin. Peking University has announced its intention to screen students, including those with ‘radical thoughts’ and ‘eccentric lifestyles’, and in Iran nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri has been arrested and charged with treason. In Sudan’s Darfur region, police have killed one protesting student and wounded several others. Full report on the University World News site
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IRELAND: New book casts doubt on university rankings In a book published last week, Dublin Institute of Technology professor, Ellen Hazelkorn, expressed severe doubts about the value of international ranking systems and argued that they undermine the broader mission to provide education, writes Dick Ahlstrom for The Irish Times. More on the University World News site
LATIN AMERICA: University rankings take root The growing influence of university rankings has reached Latin America, with governments, news media and private researchers drawing up domestic versions that they say are important for the institutions and students alike, writes Andrew Downie for The Chronicle of Higher Education. More on the University World News site
INDIA: University chiefs back semester plan The vice-chancellors of state and central universities from across India unanimously supported a semester system at a two-day conference in Delhi, writes Kavita Chowdhury for India Today. More on the University World News site
UK: Fury over order to study the big society The UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council will spend a ‘significant’ amount of its funding on the prime minister’s vision for the country, after a government ‘clarification’ of the Haldane principle – a convention that for 90 years has protected the right of academics to decide where research funds should be spent, writes Daniel Boffey for the Observer. More on the University World News site
UK: Chinese accused of stealing British inventions Noted English industrial designer, Sir James Dyson, has accused a section of Chinese students studying in the United Kingdom of infiltrating universities in order to steal intellectual property and technology inventions, reports the International Business Times. More on the University World News site
PERU: Yale returns Machu Picchu artefacts A first batch of nearly 400 Machu Picchu objects arrived in Peru last week from Yale University, almost 100 years after they were taken away from the Inca citadel by explorer and academic Hiram Bingham, reports The Times of India. More on the University World News site
CHINA: Building of Sino-American university underway The Chinese economic hub of Shanghai began construction of the New York University Shanghai (NYU Shanghai) last week, the first university jointly operated by China and the United States, reports Xinhuanet. More on the University World News site
US: Rutgers joins colleges paying for speakers On 15 May, Nobel Prize-winning novelist Toni Morrison will give the commencement address at Rutgers University in New Jersey. For her trouble, she will receive an honorary doctorate of letters – and a cheque for $30,000. Rutgers said the payment would be the first for a graduation speech in its 245-year history, writes Richard Pérez-Pena for The New York Times. More on the University World News site
AUSTRALIA: Business takes dim view of academe Launching its higher education policy, the Business Council of Australia’s education taskforce said graduates still lacked essential attributes, especially in leadership, teamwork and communication, but universities were failing to heed the call, writes Julie Hare for The Australian. More on the University World News site
SCOTLAND: Students sue for higher grades Growing numbers of students in Scotland are taking legal action against their universities for failing to provide adequate support for degree courses. According to the legal firm Ross Harper, six students across the country have taken out cases after receiving lower grades than they expected, writes Fiona MacLeod for Scotland on Sunday. More on the University World News site
UK: Failed fees plan may end up costing £1billion Some of England’s worst universities plan to charge students close to the maximum fee of £9,000 (US$14,406) a year and not one of them plans to charge average fees of £6,000 a year or less – the level which ministers said would be the norm when they announced the controversial proposals. This could end up costing the government £1 billion more than budgeted each year as it will have to provide upfront fees to universities, long before students repay them, write Oliver Wright, Lewis Smith and Joe Dyke for The Independent. More on the University World News site
WALES: Universities face up to ‘challenging’ cuts Universities in South Wales are coming to terms with a “challenging” funding settlement which has seen their public cash cut, writes Gareth Evans for South Wales Echo. More on the University World News site
UK: A third of students drop out of university – study Student drop-out rates at former polytechnics range between 30% and 40%, while the Higher Education Statistics authority predicts that more than 76,000 students who started their studies in 2008 will fail to graduate this summer, writes Kate Loveys for the Daily Mail. More on the University World News site
US: Bishops urge Catholic Schools to ban nun’s book A committee of American Roman Catholic bishops announced last Wednesday that a popular book about God by Sister Elizabeth A Johnson, a theologian at Fordham University in New York, should not be used in Catholic schools and universities because it does not uphold church doctrine, writes Laurie Goodstein for The New York Times. More on the University World News site
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