On my way home from India last week, I stopped off in Dubai to take a quick peek at what was going on in the Gulf (which, just to define our terms a bit, consist of Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, the last of which is a confederation of seven tiny statelets, including Abu Dhabi and Dubai). Here’s my quick primer:
The Gulf basically has four kinds of universities. First, it has “public” universities. The definition is a little tricky in the Gulf, where the coffers of the state and those of ruling families are somewhat intertwined, but one key feature of them is that they tend to be reserved for nationals. (Only about half the population of the Gulf is made up of nationals, and in Qatar and the UAE the number is more like 10%). A couple of these institutions are quite good – the King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Dhahran, for instance, or the United Arab Emirates University in Al-Ain. Many are so-so, but nevertheless they represent the “flagships” of the national system.
After publics, it starts getting complicated. There are what I call “prestige local privates”; these are usually sponsored by members of the local royal family but are not technically public (they are sometimes non-profit, but this seems to be a pretty elastic definition in the region). Al-Khalifa University and the University of Sharjah in the UAE meet this description, so does Alfaisal University in Riyadh. These universities aren’t bad, but there is virtually no research associated with them. They do take on international students, partly to demonstrate their “quality”.
The region has run-of-the-mill private colleges, but these are rare outside the UAE. More common are “branch campuses” – but one has to be somewhat careful about how to categorize these. Sometimes you get genuine branches: schools like Amity, Heriot-Watt, Middlesex and Saint-Petersburg State Economic University (yes, there’s a Russian market to serve in the Gulf) are genuine branches. But then you get “foreign” universities which are not branches (e.g. American University of Sharjah), “foreign” universities which are actually royally-sponsored prestige privates (e.g. NYU and the Sorbonne in Abu Dhabi, the entire Education City complex in Doha and to some extent College of the North Atlantic – Qatar as well), and “foreign” universities which are actually almost entirely local but deliver a foreign curricula under a foreign brand (e.g. Algonquin College Kuwait).
Anyways, all these universities are fighting over an incredibly fragmented student market, which can be divided into four segments. The first is Male Nationals, who really aren’t “in play” for most universities. If they are genuinely sharp, they go abroad. If not, they stay at home, attend public universities and rake in student bursary money. The incentive to work hard and get a “good degree” is significantly tempered by the fact that many (most?) of them are destined for extremely cushy public service jobs, which are largely considered a birthright (and indeed the price Gulf Monarchies pay for the privilege of remaining monarchies).
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