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CARIB | Aug 27, 2022

UWI’s five-year strategic plan approved and under way

/ Our Today

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An aerial view of the University of the West Indies (UWI) Mona campus from the Hermitage Road entrance in St Andrew. (Photo: Facebook @UWIMona)

Ushered by the success of the regional university’s soaring reputation over the past five years, the 2022-2027 strategic direction for The University of the West Indies (The UWI) has been approved. 

Dubbed the ‘Revenue Revolution’, this second phase of The UWI Triple A Strategy was given the green light by the University Council during a special meeting of its members held in July and is now underway as the new academic year begins.

According to Vice-Chancellor of The UWI, Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, “The university’s leadership is confident in the Triple A Strategy’s continued success. As we pursue this next critical strategic cycle, the Revenue Revolution, we look forward to the continued partnership of our UWI community including Caribbean governments, regional and international corporations, and development partners.”

Under the leadership of Vice-Chancellor Beckles, The UWI’s strategic plan is formulated as a ten-year strategy, compartmentalised into two, five-year phases. It is themed the Triple A Strategy because of its focus on widening access to quality tertiary education, alignment of the university with academic-industry partnerships relevant to the region’s needs, and improved agility through global connections and initiatives. 

Vice-Chancellor of the University of the West Indies (The UWI), Sir Hilary Beckles. (Photo: The UWI)

The first phase, dubbed the Reputation Revolution mobilised from 2017-2022 focused on building The UWI’s global reputation and led to The UWI steadily advancing to the top tier of Times Higher Education’s global universities rankings.

This achievement set in place all the vital elements needed for the second phase, The Reputation Revolution, centred on the conversion of The UWI’s reputational value into much-needed revenue to stabilise the university and improve its financial health through the leveraging of digital transformation.

Vice-Chancellor Beckles notes a specific and significant target for 2022-2027: “One of our major objectives in this strategic cycle is to utilise the resources and capabilities of the institution to earn a net of US$250million over the next five years. To achieve this, we will monetise our strong international reputation by expanding our educational goods and services to a global market.”

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