Italian academics have warned that the south of the country could be turned into a higher education 鈥渄esert鈥 because of an exodus of professor positions to richer northern regions.
In 2018, southern and聽central Italy lost the equivalent of 280 researchers, according to聽聽from a group of reformist academics, Return on Academic Research (Roars).
Beniamino Cappelletti Montano, an associate professor of mathematics and computer science at the University of Cagliari, and a聽member聽of Roars, said that, since 2012, about 1,300 professor positions had moved from south to north.
Since then, Italy鈥檚 funding system has meant that, when an academic retires, half the money for their position stays with their institution but the other half is redistributed across other Italian universities according to a range of criteria.
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These include the financial situation of the university and how much it raises from student fees. Critics argue that this disadvantages institutions in the much poorer south.
鈥淭he consequence of these politics is a disaster not only for southern Italian universities but their regions,鈥 said Dr Montano. 鈥淚f you have fewer professors, you are forced to close some courses and then to lose students, and then to lose funding...and then to lose professors...in a vicious circle which will have as a final consequence the desertification of higher education in the poorer part of Italy.鈥
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Luigi Nicolais, former president of Italy鈥檚 National Research Council, added that the redistribution formula also rewards greater income from industry, which is inevitably easier to win in wealthier areas.
Giuseppe De Nicolao, professor of control and systems engineering at the University of Pavia and a member of Roars, said that the shift of researchers from south to north was 鈥渏ust a piece of the overall puzzle鈥 in a broader debate in Italy over whether wealthy northern areas should have more control over their taxes.
The debate took on new life in 2017 when Lombardy and Veneto 鈥 two wealthy northern provinces 鈥撀, reflecting long-standing concerns that such regions financially prop up the south.
础听聽against this 鈥渟uccession of the rich鈥 from the rest of Italy has been launched by Gianfranco Viesti, professor of economics at the University of Bari, capital of southeastern coastal region聽Apulia.聽He also warned in a聽聽that a 鈥渘ew gap鈥 had emerged between universities in the north and south of the country. In 2017, Lombardy, whose capital is Milan, had a gross domestic product per capita of 鈧38,212 (拢34,320) 鈥 close to twice that of聽Apulia,聽where .
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A spokeswoman for Italy鈥檚 Ministry of Education, Universities and Research pointed out that northern universities had fewer professors per student compared with institutions in the south.
The rules had not been set to take positions from the south and move them north, she argued, and some southern universities had done well from the formula in 2018. The system gives 鈥渕ore聽full professor budget points to those聽universities that have fewer staff and more funds available鈥.
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