Universities as agents for social and economic progress.

AuthorKunhardt, Erich E.
PositionDevelopment Watch

There is general recognition that the realization of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) is a shared responsibility of both developed and developing countries. Concrete actions under consideration include reassessing financial assistance provided by developed countries, seeking quantitative measures of success, increasing collaborative efforts between and among parties, and promoting home-grown initiatives by developing countries. Noteworthy is the effort to encourage developing countries to tap, as instruments of national transformation, educated and skilled individuals who, all too often, have been drawn to the developed world.

In this essay, I suggest that the university in developing countries can serve a critical function in the realization of MDGs. The mission I am proposing does not derive from the model of the traditional American or European university, with its emphases on undergraduate, graduate and professional education and academic research. These are non-trivial goals that should not be neglected, but they are insufficient to make the university an agent of change in the developing world. Rather, the university I have in mind must span the social and material gaps between creative individuals with innovative ideas, on the one side, and the application of technology for economic progress and social betterment, on the other. The university also will serve as a bridge that carries the traffic of social and economic development. At Stevens Institute of Technology, we label this enhanced mission as "education rooted in Technogenesis". By accepting it, the university takes responsibility for direct involvement in shaping and satisfying the needs of the community.

The arguments in favour of this mission emerge from considering these questions: Why is the university particularly well suited for this more engaged role? How can its traditional functions be enhanced to make it central to the development of a country or, in other words, what is education rooted in Technogenesis? And, finally, can Technogenesis form the basis for taking increased advantage of the financial assistance made available by the developed countries?

At present, the university in developing countries has a unique opportunity to create its own model, not by following others but through guided self-development. This can have a significant impact on the economic and social development of a nation, well beyond the education of its people. Here I provide a general outline of why I believe this to be the case. First, the world climate is right for transforming the role of the university in the developing world. For decades, the ideological posturing and political battles of the cold war significantly consumed the energies of the university. But those battles have been put aside for now and those energies can be refocused on the battle for self-realization. Success can be achieved through self-direction, not by once again blindly following after the "great nations". A nation's greatness entails the integration of many elements, and thus the models from the developed world, in particular that of the university, are not wholly transferable. The traditional univers ity in the developed world is only a part of a more complex socio-political entity, and therefore its...

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