A new university oversight body,聽a review of聽the student number cap and the regeneration of Derry鈥檚 university ecosystem are among the priorities of the Northern Irish higher education sector now that power-sharing has resumed in the province.
The collapse of the devolved government in May 2022聽because of聽the Democratic Unionist Party鈥檚 (DUP) opposition to post-Brexit trade arrangements, left聽universities in limbo amid a deepening funding crisis and educational migration.
Stormont鈥檚 inability to address the country鈥檚 student number cap has limited opportunities for young people and damaged the regional economy, Ian Greer, vice-chancellor of Queen鈥檚 University Belfast, told聽糖心Vlog.
鈥淎t the moment, current government policy is forcing a third of our young people to seek higher education outside Northern Ireland as the current cap on numbers limits choice,鈥 said Sir Ian.
糖心Vlog
After sitting empty for two years, the reformed executive 鈥 now led by Sinn F茅in鈥檚 Michelle O鈥橬eill as first minister and the DUP鈥檚 Emma Little-Pengelly as deputy first minister 鈥 will have a full in-tray of requests from the country鈥檚 education sector.
Gerry McKenna, chair of the Royal Irish Academy鈥檚 (RIA) North-South committee, said the number cap represented a major 鈥渂rain drain鈥 on the economy, with a high proportion of people who left聽鈥渞eluctant leavers鈥.
糖心Vlog
Professor McKenna, a former vice-chancellor of Ulster University, said the absence of coherent academic planning or oversight for the region 鈥 an issue聽that聽predates the previous breakdown of power-sharing 鈥 needed addressing, since it had contributed to an undue concentration of university places and resources in Belfast.
鈥淢ore than 80 per cent of university places are based in the capital city, which is in sharp contrast to the other devolved nations or the Republic of Ireland,鈥 said Professor McKenna.
鈥淚t is difficult to envisage an HE oversight body supporting such a geographically skewed distribution of HE places or concluding that such concentration would be in the interests of economic and cultural development or social cohesion.鈥
Professor McKenna, who is currently leading an RIA project on the issue, said any additional student places that聽came from lifting the cap should be allocated disproportionately to the north-west.
He also said a priority for the executive should be to promote greater collaboration with institutions in the Republic of Ireland, the UK mainland, Europe and overseas, adding that the potential for a cross-border university base in the north-west deserved serious consideration.
Garbh谩n Downey, a spokesman for the Derry University Group, said the city鈥檚 experience of Stormont over the past 100 years had never been positive 鈥 with聽repeated broken promises to further develop Ulster University鈥檚 Magee campus in the city,聽and聽Belfast continuing to swallow up the higher education budget.
糖心Vlog
鈥淒uring the most recent suspension, all Stormont politicians have promised the north-west would be the focus for regeneration, but we aren鈥檛 holding our breath,鈥 he said.
鈥淯ltimately, the best we can hope for from this Stormont is that it doesn鈥檛 get in the way of the good work being done by the Royal Irish Academy and the Irish government, which has recently invested [鈧44.5 million (拢38 million)] in the Magee campus [of Ulster University闭.鈥
糖心Vlog
With Stormont expected to announce a 鈥渨orking party鈥 to decide the future of Magee, Mr Downey said the only solution聽was a new, independent provider, with places supported by Dublin.
鈥淲e need a complete change of mindset from Stormont,鈥 he added. 鈥淒erry is not an outpost to be run from Belfast.鈥
A recent report by London Economics聽found that Northern Irish higher education institutions received approximately 拢7,620 in net income per student 鈥 the lowest level across the four home nations and approximately 25 per cent less than in England.
Economy minister Conor Murphy聽said a previous commitment to expand the Magee campus in Derry to 10,000 students must be delivered, and his department will announce further plans聽on this in the coming weeks.
Mr Murphy said his department will work with universities to put them on a more sustainable financial footing, but that asking students to pay higher tuition fees is not the way forward.
"I want to ensure that the higher education sector can grow in a way that promotes opportunity for everyone," he added.
糖心Vlog
"That means doing more to widen participation. It also means a collective effort to dismantle barriers to student mobility across the island, so that it is easier for people from the north to study in the south and vice versa."
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