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| Mar 10, 2021

Sir Hilary to serve as UN expert on higher education

/ Our Today

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Sir Hilary Beckles, vice-chancellor of The University of the West Indies (Photo: Caricom)

The United Nations has invited Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, vice-chancellor of The University of the West Indies (The UWI), to serve as an expert for its ‘Futures of Higher Education Project’.

Led by the UNESCO International Institute for Higher Education in Latin America and the Caribbean (UNESCO-IESALC), the project is intended to “generate innovative and visionary ideas about the purpose and functions of higher education”.

The invitation to Sir Hilary from Francesc Pedró, UNESCO-IESALC director, states, “you will have the opportunity to share your ideas and wisdom” while “stimulating creative and imaginative thinking and ideas about the futures of higher education from multiple and global perspectives.”

FIVE-MEMBER PANEL

The five-member panel of experts includes Professor Ronald Barnett from University College London; Professor Mpine Makoe, from University of South Africa; Professor Simon Marginson from University of Oxford and Professor Takyiwaa Manuh from University of Ghana.

The panel will provide relevant data and ideas to inform the UNESCO-IESALC Futures of Education Global Initiative and will provide much of the evidentiary basis for a report to be published in November 2021.

The aim is to envision the higher education landscape beyond 2030 and to shape world opinion about the 2050 horizon.

“The success of The UWI is the basis of this very special opportunity and is therefore a tribute to my colleagues who have been in the engine room doing what many have said is impossible… .”

Sir Hilary Beckles, vice chancellor of the University of the West Indies

Sir Hilary was also selected in 2017 to provide this visioning as president of the 48-member association, ‘Universities Caribbean’, and has conceptualised and implemented The UWI’s Triple ‘A’ Strategic Plan built
around pillars of ‘Access’, ‘Alignment’ and ‘Agility’.

The two-phased strategy emphasises firstly, the launch of a “reputation revolution” for The UWI, with a second phase to convert “reputation to revenue”.

It is considered one of the most visionary and transformative strategic plans in global higher education and is the basis of The UWI’s rocketing to the top of regional and global universities rankings.

Commenting on the invitation to shape the future of the global higher education landscape, Sir Hilary noted: “The success of The UWI is the basis of this very special opportunity and is therefore a tribute to my colleagues who have been in the engine room doing what many have said is impossible: building a global elite university in a region suffering from systemic economic decline to serve as a beacon of hope for our
people increasingly driven into a mentality of doubt with growing despair.”

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