Fears that the Supreme Court decision on abortion rights 飞颈濒濒听lead to a divide in US higher education聽are growing, with several new sets of data suggesting large numbers of students are ready to switch institutions to avoid聽states that plan to make the procedure illegal.聽
About 20 per cent of students聽currently based in聽areas where聽anti-abortion legislation is likely to be passed say they 鈥渄efinitely鈥 plan to transfer,聽while a quarter聽are considering it, according to a聽survey of 1,000 students by the聽.
Two other sites 鈥 Study.eu and HousingAnywhere.com, which specialise in connecting students to universities and housing options in Europe 鈥 have both reported聽听颈苍听.聽The latter聽said a year-on-year increase in enquiries from the US of about 85 per cent climbed to nearly 200 per cent in the days after聽the ruling聽ended the federally protected right聽to an abortion.
Gerrit Bruno Bl枚ss, the chief executive officer of Study.eu, said beyond the immediate impact of the decision, many聽fear it is a聽signal that further rights will be聽under threat in future, hence the desire to leave the country.
糖心Vlog
Students may also be influenced by the rise in the value of the US dollar against the euro and pound, Mr Bl枚ss said. 鈥淪tudying in Europe was already substantially cheaper, on average, than in the US, and is now even more affordable,鈥 he said, particularly because many US colleges are announcing increases in tuition rates聽because of inflation.聽
Katherine Walker, a sophomore at the University of Alaska Fairbanks who identifies as聽transgender and queer, is considering leaving聽over concerns about the abortion ruling and other governmental policies in areas such as聽medical privacy rights and the failure to tackle聽racial and gender biases.
糖心Vlog
鈥淩ight now, because of reasons relating to finances and disability, I feel like moving out of the country is sort of a dream,鈥澛爐hey told聽糖心Vlog. 鈥淗owever, the seriousness of the situation is pushing me to move forward with preparing so I can leave the country and emigrate elsewhere if things get worse or circumstances change.鈥
Mr Bl枚ss acknowledged that many of the students considering their options聽were engaged in 鈥渨ishful thinking鈥 but聽predicted that universities in Western and Northern Europe聽could see increases in applications of up to 20 per cent from the US next year, depending on how things develop after the聽midterm elections in November.
The next report from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, due in September, will show how many college students followed through with desires to transfer. In May, the body found overall declines in student transfers during the spring semester,聽but an increase of 5 per cent in those switching聽between four-year institutions.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Abortion ruling sparks surge in transfer plans
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