A new Australian university network has vowed to produce a 鈥渨orkforce strategy鈥 to address labour market needs across a remote tropical region as big as India.
The Northern Australia Universities Alliance, which brings together Australia鈥檚 tropically based institutional trio of Central Queensland, Charles Darwin and James Cook universities, has set itself the challenge of forecasting employment trends across one of the world鈥檚 more forbidding landscapes.
The strategy will track and supply the giant region鈥檚 labour market needs in health, social services, education, agriculture, mining, renewable energy, the environment, disaster resilience, tourism and digital capabilities.
It is one plank of an ambitious collaborative programme that also includes undertaking joint research, seeking combined funding opportunities and delivering integrated courses in indigenous leadership.
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James Cook University vice-chancellor Sandra Harding said her experience as a member of the Queensland government鈥檚 skills advisory board had taught her how 鈥渄evilishly difficult鈥 it was to predict future requirements for workers. But it was important to try, in a region suffering a 鈥渕aldistribution of professionals鈥.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a dearth of professional knowledge, expertise and human capital鈥cross the broader north,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ithout [a workforce strategy], we鈥檙e always going to be limited to achieve the sort of economic prosperity and community well-being that the north deserves.鈥
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Professor Harding said the three universities still needed to 鈥渇lesh out鈥 an approach to anticipating skills needs in a vast geographic region with small populations and environmental and connectivity challenges.
鈥淗ow do we collectively tap into industry and the services sectors in particular鈥o come to grips with getting ready for tomorrow? If we can鈥檛 do something beyond the scale of an industry, a single university or a particular community, we鈥檙e never going to realise the value that northern Australia represents.鈥
The alliance members will also work collaboratively on natural disasters, complementing the recent announcement that the three universities will聽聽in partnership with the Cooperative Research Centre for Developing Northern Australia.
Professor Harding said 鈥渃limate disturbances鈥 common to tropical Australia, such as cyclones, floods and bushfires, were set to intensify. 鈥淓ach of the three universities attends to those things in different ways. We have different infrastructure that can inform government, public policy and community responses and community preparedness.
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鈥淲e live in the north. This is our home. We confront the same sorts of challenges. The idea is to see what we can do collectively. It has to be the case that we will be able to deliver more collectively than individually.鈥
While the three institutions will consider offering joint education programmes, the alliance will also focus on 鈥渘ot doubling up where it鈥檚 not sensible to do so鈥, Professor Harding said. 鈥淚t may well be that we can leverage each other through sharing some curriculum, courseware or, indeed, courses themselves.鈥
While the region鈥檚 vastness made it imperative for all three universities to offer core courses, she said it might make sense to have individual institutions 鈥渢aking the lead鈥 in niche areas, just as universities divvied up some language teaching to maximise opportunities to learn foreign tongues.
鈥淎ll three of us are committed to ensuring that students in the north writ large have a very rich and productive educational experience. If we can add to that by providing access to areas that we might not be offering, we should be open to that.鈥
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