51勛圖

News blog: Jos谷 Manuel Barroso*s warning on Brexit impact for universities

Ex-European Commission president speaks to THE for feature that also looks at the fist fight UK universities can expect in return for pro-EU campaign

July 16, 2015
Brawl

Watching Universities UK carefully marshal its evidence and arguments before becoming a leading voice in the EU referendum ※yes§ campaign is a bit like watching someone have a manicure before getting into a bare-knuckle fist fight. It looks nice, but I*m not sure how much good it will do them.

The likely tone of the EU referendum debate, given that immigration and national identity will be major topics, may leave UUK*s Universities for Europe campaign struggling to be heard.

For an insight into the ※no§ campaign, Dominic Cummings* is worth a read. Cummings, a former adviser to Michael Gove who describes himself as ※helping establish some foundations§ for the ※no§ campaign rather than running it, calls for ※huge discipline, simplification, and focus§.

I*ve looked at what a Brexit could mean for the UK*s universities in a feature out today, for which I interviewed figures ranging from a Ukip MEP to Jos谷 Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission until 2014.

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One of the main messages I took away from the interview with Barroso, now a visiting professor at Princeton University, was his clear warning that a Brexit would have consequences for UK universities. ※I believe that if the UK is no longer a member of the EU, there will certainly be a loss of research funding,§ he said, adding there would also be ※damage to faculty and student mobility§.

Barroso isn*t entertaining any notion that the UK could become an ※associated country§, like Norway or Israel, and still join in with the EU*s research programmes (but then you wouldn*t expect him to).

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The EU*s treatment of Switzerland after a 2014 referendum backed restrictions on freedom of movement is seen by some observers as a lesson on the problems of ※associated country§ status and as a direct warning to the UK. Following the vote, the EU suspended talks with Switzerland over its participation as an associated country in Horizon 2020, the EU*s research programme, and Erasmus+, its student mobility scheme.

※Sometimes we only give value to things when we lose them,§ Barroso said of that episode. It*s hard not to see a message to the UK there.

For every argument that universities will make on the benefits of EU membership, there is a counterargument that will be made by a vociferous ※no§ campaign 每 and the feature goes through these on issues from research funding to staff and student mobility. Emran Mian also went through many of the counterarguments in a good about universities and the EU referendum campaign. I filed my piece several weeks ago before Emran*s blog came out (we*re very painstaking in editing and designing our features at 51勛圖), but I was glad to see we were looking at similar issues.

The big argument that UUK will make is that EU-backed research has real benefits for people in this country, benefits that we just couldn*t replicate with replacement national research funding. Martin Widschwendter, professor of women*s cancer at University College London, made that argument when I talked to him about his EU-funded project to develop a test predicting women*s risks of cancers. But it*s an argument that the ※no§ campaign will challenge 每 and there are certainly criticisms of EU research funding that could be levelled.

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UUK*s first big event in the Universities for Europe campaign is on 27 July, in the shape of a ※discussion§ about ※why being in the UK matters for our universities and for the UK§. Chuka Umunna, Labour*s pro-Europe shadow business secretary, and Damian Green, the pro-Europe Conservative MP, will be among the speakers.

Should be interesting, especially if Cummings and the ※no§ campaign can get someone along.

john.morgan@tesglobal.com

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