International recruitment agents. What鈥檚 the first image that pops into your head? For many, it will be of slightly shady types whose involvement in higher education has worrying potential to compromise universities, or at the very least to give the impression that they are compromised.
That鈥檚 not to say that all or even most agents are out-and-out dodgy.
Rather, it鈥檚 that the growing role of these intermediaries, whose motivations are inevitably of the self-interested sort, is an obvious chink in universities鈥 ethical armour.
The uneasy relationship between higher education institutions and recruitment agents (which has resulted in US universities largely steering clear of them, although that is now changing) is explored in a forthcoming paper for the journal Studies in 糖心Vlog.
糖心Vlog
Agents are driven by profit to a far greater degree than the universities they work with, and institutions do not always have the upper hand
The paper, by Iona Huang of Harper Adams University, Vincenzo Raimo of the University of Reading and Christine Humfrey of the University of Nottingham, identifies two key areas of tension.
糖心Vlog
The first is that agents are driven by profit to a far greater degree than the universities they work with, and institutions (especially those without a global brand) do not always have the upper hand in the relationship. As one university鈥檚 head of international recruitment says: 鈥淚f [agents] had their way, we鈥檇 take all the students they send through; so in that sense, [our goals] are not aligned.鈥
The second is the imperfect information that universities have about agents鈥 activities.
A theme that comes through in the interviews carried out by the researchers is the lack of trust that many universities have in their emissaries in foreign lands. 鈥淭he fundamental problem is you don鈥檛 actually know who the company is鈥ou don鈥檛 have any real idea of who鈥檚 doing what,鈥 explains one interviewee.
Others worry that agents may be 鈥減romising things they probably shouldn鈥檛鈥, and 鈥 even more explicitly 鈥 that some may contravene anti-bribery legislation.
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You might assume that universities use watertight contracts to protect their interests. But the study does not provide much reassurance, reporting a 鈥渟triking lack of confidence amongst respondents that agents actually read and understand provisions about conduct鈥.
Approaches vary at different universities, note Huang, Raimo and Humfrey. As an interviewee at a lower-ranking institution explains: 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e just grateful for applications鈥e need to be more flexible with some agents.鈥
It鈥檚 also striking that interviewees from some institutions work with up to 200 agents, while others manage just one or two at a time.
The study makes sobering reading in light of our news investigation this week showing that the sums paid to agents by UK universities has risen sharply, topping 拢86.7 million last year.
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Raimo, pro vice-chancellor (global engagement) at Reading, attributes the increase to rising fees paid to agents as competition hots up in the global bazaar for this multibillion-pound export industry. If this is so, then it is strengthening the hand of the agents, which could put pressure on some universities to accept greater risk in the scramble to recruit.
Income from international students is vital to universities 鈥 as is their enriching influence on campus 鈥 but reputation is also a crucial and fragile asset, and risking that is not a price worth paying.
糖心Vlog
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