The University of Birmingham has launched a major partnership with Trinity College Dublin across research, education and professional services, with the aim of strengthening its European links ahead of Brexit.
Academics from the two universities will work together initially across three research areas: clinical trials and training; biomaterials; and digital textual editing.
On the education side, there will be joint taught masterās programmes in each of the three research areas as well as exchange opportunities for students.
The universities will also collaborate across professional services, sharing best practice on areas including online timetabling, academic year structure and the operational management of university facilities.
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Robin Mason, pro vice-chancellor (international) at Birmingham, said that the intent was to āmove over time to an even deeper mode of partnershipā, which would include joint appointments and shared facilities.
Vice-chancellor Sir David Eastwood said that the partnership agreement, which was signed on 25Ā January, came āout of us thinking through the way we want to be positioned with European institutions post-Brexitā, but added āweāve been interested for a long time in working closely with a partner in the Irish Republicā.
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āWhen we were looking to develop European partnerships, as mundane and pedestrian as it sounds, one of the criteria was the ease of getting there and back,ā he said.
When asked whether he hoped the collaboration would allow Birmingham to access European funding post-Brexit, Sir David said: āIt will certainly give us options and opportunities. Some of those might be Brexit-relatedā¦but IĀ donāt think those options and opportunities are restricted just to Brexit.ā
For example, he said, the collaboration would allow Birmingham to āplay into the UKās industrial strategyā¦in a way that we may not be able to do quite so much if we were doing it without the partnershipā.
āTime will tell what Brexit will mean. In the meantime, having such a strong partnership just puts you in an excellent position for whatever context you have to deal with,ā he added.
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Sir David said that there was āaĀ good fit between the institutionsā and āreal interest on the part of both universities in the infrastructural development we both haveā.
āOne of the things we donāt do at Birmingham is we donāt try to artificially create partnerships where they donāt exist naturally between members of faculty,ā he continued.
Professor Mason added that the university was ānot doing something that we wouldnāt do in the absence of Brexitā, although he admitted that Brexit had helped to āaccelerate some of the thinkingā and highlighted that āthere arenāt that many major strategic partnerships between UK and Irish universities, and there really should beā.
Several other UK universities have established closer collaborations with European research institutions since the Brexit vote, including the University of Warwick, Imperial College London, the University of Oxford and Kingās College London.
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