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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Hague's poor university exam

September 24, 2012 14:25
2 min read

I make no apologies for bringing to your attention again a matter that I raised in my column two months ago. On that occasion, I berated the Israeli academic establishment for its frankly self-serving opposition to the proposal to upgrade the status of Ariel University Centre, in the West Bank, to that of a full university.

I explained that, with some 14,000 students, and having for some time awarded its own degrees, Ariel was a university in all but name. I added that, although Israeli opposition to the desired status upgrade appeared to be grounded in the fear that such a move might bring down upon the whole of Israeli higher education the wrath of the international boycotting community, the underlying motive of Ariel's detractors was to protect the monopoly of access to public funding currently enjoyed by existing Israeli universities. "Ariel," I added, "is in danger of falling victim to a species of particularly malodorous selfishness that protects privilege without the slightest shame."

A great deal of lobbying has gone on since then. On September 9, Israel's cabinet agreed to endorse Ariel's application for conversion to a fully accredited university. Education Minister Gideon Sa'ar declared that this would be good for the entire higher education system. "The government sees the national importance of the conversion of the centre to a university… 40 years have passed since the last research university was established in Israel and since then the population has tripled. The higher education system must continue to… meet the need for quality education and advanced study."

The row over Ariel's upgrade is, however, far from over. Israel's Council for Higher Education, which represents the academic establishment, has - predictably - started legal action in order to protect that establishment's privileged funding position. And it has found a most unlikely ally in the shape of British Foreign Secretary William Hague.