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UWI to protect CARICOM in the European Union. New partnership with EUI set to deepen ties

Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Vice-Chancellor, The University of the West Indies (The UWI) displays a copy of the MOU with European University Institute (EUI), after signing it during a virtual ceremony on July 14, 2020.

The UWI Regional Headquarters, Jamaica. Thursday, 23 July 2020 – A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed between The University of the West Indies (The UWI) and the European University Institute (EUI), is expected to deepen ties between the Caribbean and Europe and help The UWI protect the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) in the European Union (EU).

Professor Renaud Dehousse, President, European University Institute (EUI) (2nd left) shows his copy of the MOU between the two Universities, which was s
igned during a virtual ceremony on July 14, 2020. 
Also pictured are Elena Asciutti (left), External Relations Officer and Bernard Hoekman, Dean of External Relations, EUI

Signed virtually on July 14, 2020, by Professor Sir Hilary Beckles, Vice-Chancellor of The UWI and Professor Renaud Dehousse, President of the EUI, the agreement includes the establishment of a research centre. That centre will help to promote inter-regional and intra-regional development and encourage discourse on how transnational and global issues impact the Caribbean Region and Europe.

The UWI and EUI partnership foresees collaboration in areas of studies and research common to both institutions. Areas of focus will include sustainable development, multilateral trade, gender equality, security, environment and climate change, migration, energy, regional integration processes and transnational governance.

Last year, Vice-Chancellor Beckles saw the economic and financial vulnerability of CARICOM as a consequence of Brexit and began to pursue a strategy to position The UWI in the EU as a strategic response.  Noting that the region needs greater policy support within the EU, in light of the EU downgrade of the region’s finance sector, and poor responses of regional entrepreneurs to the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA), he noted that The UWI had to step up to create an academic research and business advisory hub in the EU.  After a year of negotiations, the EUI agreed to host a joint UWI-EU centre. “It will be anchored in Florence, Italy and will provide services to our foreign service community, business groups, advocacy leaders in issues such as public health, climate change, economics equity for small island nations”, Vice-Chancellor Beckles explained.

Referring to the relationship between Europe and the Caribbean over 500 years as “one of the most intense historical experiences between two parts of the world and the basis of modernity as we know it”, Vice-Chancellor Beckles said “It is a relationship that has to be sustained within the context of its positive contributions, mutually to Europe and to the Caribbean and of course to the wider world.  So, it is perfectly normal therefore that universities ought to be coming together within this context to sustain the benefits and to provide a vision for the future of this relationship.”

Pointing to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), defined by the United Nations, he said, “they have certainly created a context within which universities are asked to become activists in the pursuit of these very laudable goals that are intended to move our cultures and our civilizations ahead within the finest values of humanity, transcending issues of trade and also focusing interest on culture and broadly speaking, development.”

Noting that joint activities by universities are very significant in effective achievement of the SDGs, Vice-Chancellor Beckles said that The UWI, for example, has been selected by the International Association of Universities to provide global advocacy around some of these sustainable goals, in particular, goal #13 which focuses on climate smart issues. 

“As we seek therefore to bring our activism in line with our teaching, our research, our advocacy, and the creation of partnerships that will enable all of us to make a greater contribution to the world and to humanity, this context is very, very significant.  So we are honoured and it is a tremendous pleasure for us to begin this partnership agreement with the EUI.  We are of one mind; we have a common vision.   Against the background of a heritage of over 500 years, it is logical therefore that we should be activists on many areas of trade, of cultural exchange and of course within the context of the sustainable development goals”, Vice-Chancellor Beckles declared.

Professor Dehousse said that given The UWI’s excellent reputation, “the partnership is a kind of bridgehead in the broader Caribbean and Latin American world and represents an opening towards a region of the world in which we are still developing contacts.” He added that “Europe’s problems today are no longer confined to what is going on within its borders, and it is absolutely indispensable for us to open up towards other regions of the world, as well as to other kinds of actors.”

Work has begun on the implementation of the MOU at both The UWI and the EUI.

1 COMMENTS

  1. Prof. Beckles as V-C continues to bring an energy and vision to U.W.I that is opening up possibilities for businesses and individuals in the Caribbean. In these times of disruption and renewal we need such leaders. Sadly Owen Arthur died suddenly last week and the baton now seems to be in the hands of Mia Mottley to carry on and exceed his work.

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