| Hi all. It’s been over a month since the last Fifteen and you might think that the world of higher education would slow down over the holidays, but you’d be wrong. Buckle up, this is a big one.
1. Back in December the government in Bulgaria was forced to resign due to anti-corruption protests that were mainly led by students (although increasingly student protest is being called “Gen Z protests”, which is interesting and I would love to understand why). Iran is also currently undergoing a spasm of unrest which began just before New Year’s Day. It’s difficult to know exactly what is going on there due to regime restrictions on the internet, but what we know for sure is that students have been in the thick of things since about Day 3 of the protests, and that security forces have been targeting universities and student dormitories since about day 7. At least two students have been killed, one at the University of Tehran and another at Shariati College, the latter apparently executed at very short range. The likelihood is that the death toll among students is much higher than this, but it may take weeks or months before a more complete picture emerges.
2. Inside Higher Education has put together a useful list of higher ed issues that will be in front of Congress in 2026, while Forbes has done the same for state legislatures. At the institutional level, the story of the U Virginia presidential search/selection seems like the one to watch right now, but if schadenfreude is more your area, you could do worse than keep an eye on the wave of departures at the “heterodox” University of Austin.
3. The epic that is the battle over university finances in Argentina continues. President Milei’s proposed 2026 Budget Law tried to revoke the previous Congressional Law on Financing of Universities (which Milei was never going to implement anyway, having issued a decree suspending the implementation of the law a few weeks earlier). Congress passed the entire bill except the bit that cut funding to universities. And then his decree was overturned in the courts. The latest data suggests that faculty salaries are now down 45% from where they were three years ago. Meanwhile, north of the border in Brazil, universities are looking forward to dealing with a budget cut of about half a billion reals, which is equivalent to about 7% of non-mandatory expenses.
4. As for cuts at the institutional level, continual underfunding at Complutense de Madrid, one of Spain’s best universities, has led the institution to impose a 35% cut on all departments. And in Germany, deep funding cuts at the state level has led institutions there into some deep restructuring as well: Jan-Martin Wiarda has the details.
5. In more positive news: South Korea has announced a whack of new funding for regional universities, presumably in line with the government’s ambition to create “10 Seoul National Universities”. Hong Kong’s universities had a collective surplus of about $1.5 billion US last year, despite having had to return several hundred million dollars mid-year to help the regional government cover a deficit. Colombia passed a new law to improve university financing. And in France, the Minister of Higher Education has launched an “Assises de financement” which might just lead to an increase in funding there as well. |
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