If the risk of a 鈥渓ost generation鈥 of Syrian students and academics is to be avoided, universities in the region must be part of the solution.
But these institutions 鈥 in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey 鈥 lack the capacity to deal with the scale of the refugee crisis and, in any case, often face problems of their own.
The ideal of 鈥渢rying to solve the problem in the region鈥 is 鈥渋mpossible鈥, said Marcello Scalisi, executive director of the (Unimed), an association of 98 institutions based around the shores of the inner sea. Meanwhile, he added, 鈥渢he position of European countries about refugees is quite confused鈥.
Unimed already facilitates European universities in integrating refugees from anywhere in the world through the . But this year has also seen the launch of another project,聽, to open local universities up to Syrians who are now based in Jordan and Lebanon 鈥 as well as to displaced Iraqis in Kurdistan. The initiative forms part of聽the European Commission鈥檚 devoted to 鈥渃apacity-building in the field of higher education鈥.
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鈥淢any refugee students had to leave Syria and would like to resume their studies,鈥 explained Raniero Chelli, senior project manager. 鈥淪ometimes they don鈥檛 have papers or the hosting countries have regulations that put constraints on enrolling foreign students.鈥 To address this, Unimed brought together several European universities (as required by such Erasmus+ projects) 鈥 Sapienza University of Rome, the聽University of Barcelona, the Technical University of Berlin and Istanbul Aydin University 鈥 and then found local partners, either through their network or through聽the Association of Arab Universities.
Each local institution is setting up a refugee student operational support unit, said Mr Chelli, 鈥渁 law office of people trained to deliver services to help them resume their university careers鈥. Although details vary, all will deliver 鈥減sychological support for people who have been traumatised鈥 as well as English courses. Relevant staff have been identified and are due to receive training or study visits to Europe, so the units should be running by the end of the year.
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The Erasmus+ programme is based on a model of 鈥渃ooperation for development鈥, which implies, Mr Chelli suggested, that 鈥渢he European universities are very advanced and know how to help southern universities improve their way of working鈥.
In reality, they needed to 鈥渃ollaborate on the basis of sharing information and experiences鈥, he explained, because Lebanese and Jordanian universities would sometimes say: 鈥淲e have been doing this for years now. We are dealing with [a refugee crisis] on a scale 10 times larger than you are. Perhaps we鈥檝e got as much to teach you.鈥
聽was launched by聽聽in Istanbul last June. The organisation is supporting about 175 refugee Syrian academics who have managed to reach the UK as part of聽聽But it is also looking to help the Syrian academics now based in Turkey whose numbers are estimated at about 1,000 by the government.
These scholars face a number of difficulties, according to programme director Kate Robertson. 鈥淭heir levels of English [and Turkish] make it difficult for them to function in Turkish universities or in the international arena,鈥 she said. They tend to lack 鈥減rofessional connections鈥 and to be inexperienced in research. Meanwhile, Turkish institutions are 鈥渧ery squeezed鈥 in terms of recruitment and are also trying to cope with the of last summer鈥檚 abortive coup.
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To meet these challenges, Cara has brought together groups of UK universities to create blended learning courses in English for academic purposes and academic skills development, which are now being piloted. Even more significantly, it is bringing refugee Syrian academics to the UK for four to eight weeks for research incubation visits, to draw up joint proposals for research projects with individual academics or groups. This will also enable them to register with a partner university so that they can access online resources.
This approach should enable Syrian academics to hone their research skills, often by working in areas of public health, for example, which may well prove useful in post-conflict Syria.
Given that much academic research now inevitably focuses on Syria and refugees, it can only help to incorporate academics with insider knowledge.
Ms Robertson has been 鈥渓obbying those who are putting in big research proposals to the [UK鈥檚] Global Challenges Research Fund, for example, to have budget lines that mean that they involve Syrian academics in the research on Syrian populations鈥.
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鈥淔or God鈥檚 sake, involve Syrians, they can bring enormous knowledge to the table even if they are not perfect researchers,鈥 she said.
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