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Delve into the history and development of EAIR and its impact on the Baltic Sea Region, examining membership statistics, key forums, and related organizations. Discover how this professional institution has evolved and expanded over the years.
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EAIR in a Changing World: EAIR Forever? The Baltic Sea Region Revisited Kari Hyppönen EAIR Forum Vilnius 2009
EAIR (history, development) • Environment -Organisations (Professional/Institutional) -Baltic Sea region -EU initiatives linked up with the region -no Bologna, Quality (ENQA etc) • So what?
History • AIR -1965 384 members • 4000 members in 1500 institutions • AAIR, CIRPA/ACPRI, DAIR, SAAIR, SEAAIR • First AIR European Forum 1979 Paris -26 participants from 12 countries (21 Europeans and five AIR members)
History • Heads/Directors/VPs of Administration Professors and Directors of Institutional Research • part-time Secretariat CHEPS Twente 1985 Frans van Vught, Peter de Rooij, Hans Acherman (Peter Maassen) • independent EAIR 1989 and The European Higher Education Society 2000
History • Membership Directory and Newsletter • TEAM 1995 Founding Editor Roddy Begg • Monograph Series • Secretariat moves to Amsterdam 1997 full-time Executive Manager Ella Kruzinga (now Hetty van Heeswijk era) • joint events since 2000
Forums • Nordic region NUAS 1982, seminars since 1976 NUS 1995 • Uppsala 1982, Copenhagen 1985 (2008) • Bergen 1988, Turku 1993 (Lund 1999) • 1990's policy to locate Forums also in "new" regions • many country "firsts"
Forums • Zurich 1995, Budapest 1996, San Sebastian 1998, Berlin 2000 • Porto 2001, Barcelona 2004, Rome 2006 Valencia 2010 • Prague 2002, Riga 2005, Vilnius 2009, Warsaw 2011 • France: Paris 1979 and Lyon 1990 • Norway: Bergen 1988
Forums • José-Ginés Mora Ruiz • Janis Stonis and Aleksas Pikturna Indrikis Muiznieks and Rimantas Vaitkus
Statistics • Membership -177 in 1990 -steady growth, then between 429 and 629 to about 500-550, 493 (496) in 2008 -100 from outside Europe -"the Rome effect"
Statistics • Membership -Netherlands 152 (1995), UK 87 (1992), Sweden 64 (2000-02), Norway 64 (2006), Finland 48 (2006), USA 47 (2004), Denmark 38 (2006), Australia 36 (1995), Switzerland 33 (1995), Ireland 29 (2003) -more than 20 in Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Portugal and Spain
Statistics • Eastern Europe -up in Latvia, Lithuania and Moldova -down in Czech Republic and Hungary -minimal in Bulgaria, Estonia, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia and Slovenia -Belarus and Ukraine?
Statistics • Forum participation -400+ in Trier 1989 and Lyon 1990 -320 in Turku 1993 -then lower, up to 378 in Porto 2001, sustained level higher than Turku, highs in Barcelona (450) 2004 and Rome (479) 2006
239 in Vilnius 2009 • Nordic countries 75 • Western Europe 73 • Southern Europe 5 • Eastern Europe 43 • Asia 6 • North America 19 • Australia (and NZ) 7 • Africa 11
Organisations • Professional organisations • Institutional organisations • Membership -Institutional -Individual -Mixed • New professional groups and new organisations (Quality specialists?)
Organisations • who decides on memberships? • membership administration/participation • who pays fees? • opportunities -vast variety of international events -not all based on membership -20-40 events marketed at the same time -who decides where to go?
Professional organisations • EAIE (European Association for International Education) -1989, more than 1800 members -membership overlaps with EAIR -21st annual conference in Madrid on 16-19 September 2009 -35 workshops -initiation/introduction to the profession
Organisations • 11 session streams including -Accreditation and evaluation -Bologna -Development cooperation -Management & organisation -Policy & strategy -National education systems • getting too big?
Organisations • IROBALT -1998, six countries, closed down in 2002 • EARMA (250/80), EIRMA, ARMA (UK, 1150), EUPRIO (437) • CHER (Consortium of HE Researchers) -1988, about 160 members in 30 countries -membership overlaps with EAIR -joint history, contribution to EAIR Forums
Organisations • SRHE, AUA, AHUA • IMUA (International Meeting of University Administrators) -now a joint AUA and AHUA operation -1981, 16th meeting in Vancouver in 2008 -participation about 250 -no membership, meetings open to all -subject to available space and fees
Organisations -meetings -programmes overseen by a UK committee -advised on topics and venues by an international advisory committee -Beijing, Bath, Hong Kong, Waterloo, New Delhi, Sydney, Maryland, Twente, Singapore, Prague, Cape Town, Auckland, Edinburgh, Helsinki, Kingston and Vancouver
Organisations • HUMANE (Heads of University Administration and Management in Europe) -1997 by 27 pioneers -among them many active EAIR members -now 200 members in 20 countries -almost all HUMANE members have left EAIR (with some important exceptions)
Institutional organisations • ESMU (European Centre for Strategic Management of Universities) • networks and projects -DEAN, HUMANE, EDUPROF -MODERN, EU-DRIVERS MODERN (Eur Platform HE Modernisation) -EAIR associate partner -mapping, questionnaires and conferences
Organisations • EUA (European University Association) -more than 800 members in 46 countries -2001 merger of CRE (Association of European Universities) and the Confederation of European Union Rectors' Conferences -members early from Eastern Europe -acronym and name changes vs. clients
Organisations • EURASHE (polytechnics), Compostela Group of Universities, the Santander Group, the Utrecht Network, UNICA, ECIU, Coimbra Group, IRUN, LERU (20 carefully selected members) • CBUR (Conference of Baltic University Rectors) -1990, by 2001 82 full and six affiliated members, last conference in Tartu in 2001
Organisations • Baltic Rectors' Conference • the Rectors' Conference of BUP of Uppsala University • next meeting on 15-16 October 2009 • teaching and research programme on sustainable development • 225 institutions
Organisations • Stephan Bathory Collegium -1999, nine universities in Budapest, Bratislava, Brno, Kaliningrad, Cracow, Prague, Vilnius and Warsaw -Vilnius University key actor -no information on recent activities -some of the members now in EEUN
Organisations • EEUN (East-European University Network) -meeting of Belarusian, Polish, Ukrainian and Russian rectors in 2004 -meetings in Cracow and Lublin in 2005-06 -35 institutions, also in Lithuania and Slovakia -no information on recent activities
Organisations • CEEUN (Central and Eastern European University Network) -for applied research on transition studies • Now -most geographical names already in use -other regions have their own networks (UNIMED etc.)
Organisations • BSRUN (Baltic Sea Region University Network) -2000, 16 universities, now 40 universities in seven countries -evaluation before 10th anniversary in Turku in February 2010 -cooperation with NUAS, early contacts in 1990's with no concrete results
Organisations • BSUA (Baltic Seminar of University Administrators) -TEMPUS projects and IMHE's Management of Change programme for Central and Eastern Europe in 1990's -discussions in 1999 of a group of 13 -first BSUA in Riga in 2000, then Kaunas, Tartu, Kaliningrad, Warsaw, Vilnius, St. Petersburg, Turku, Gdansk and Riga
Organisations • joint BSRUN and EAIR events -9th and 10th BSUA in Gdansk and Riga -External Relations seminar at Warsaw School of Economics on 10-11 December 2009 -Business Relations -Media Relations • EAIR Forum in Warsaw in 2011
Organisations • Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian networks -the Baltic Graduate School -2008, Social Sciences and Humanities -Tallinn University, University of Latvia Vytautas Magnus University (Kaunas) • the Baltic Association of Summer Schools -University of Tartu, Vilnius University, University of Latvia, Klaipeda University
Organisations • Less interest in CEE Networks? • New tasks like EU – Russia, Belarus, Ukraine cooperation: EEUN? • Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window consortia -EU-Russia (University of Turku) -EU-Belarus, Moldova,Ukraine (University of Deusto, Bilbao)
EU Baltic Sea Region Strategy • Higher Education and Research -to exploit the full potential of the region in research and innovations (coordination: Sweden and Poland); and -to maintain and reinforce the attractiveness of the Baltic Sea region in particular through education (Germany), tourism and health
EU Baltic Sea Region Strategy • Baltic Sea Fund for Innovation and Development (lead: NCM) • Enhancement of cooperation of between the (regional) universities (Fast Track) • Development of joint curricula and the sharing of educational resources (FT) • Identification and removal of barriers hampering mobility of researchers and students
EU Baltic Sea Region Strategy • University cooperation -based on existing networks -BSRUN and BUP with UHI Millennium Institute given as a model -the Northern Dimension Institute could also provide opportunities for networking -leadership: BUP with Lithuania (tbc)
EU Eastern Partnership • EU and Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine • Declaration of the Prague Eastern Partnership Summit on 7 May 2009 • increased EU financial support is agreed • Comprehensive Institution Building Programmes (training, technical assistance and innovative measures)
EU Baltic Sea Region Strategy and Eastern Partnership • Swedish Presidency since 1st July 2009 • need to be coordinated with EU joint actions and programmes with Russia • Eastern Partnership: Poland and Sweden • Northern Dimension: Finland • much will depend on the importance of the Baltic Sea region to Poland and Germany
CBSS • members: all countries by the Baltic Sea, Norway and Iceland with EU participation • 1992, Hans-Dietrich Genscher and Uffe Elleman-Jensen • BSPC, BSSSC, HELCOM, VASAB, Baltic Development Forum, Baltic Sea Forum, ScanBalt and UBC (Union of Baltic Cities) • EuroFaculties: Riga, Tartu and Vilnius; Kaliningrad; and Pskov (PPI and PVI)
CBSS • the future of EuroFaculties -continuation of the Pskov project? -EuroFaculties in Belarus or Ukraine? • increased interest in direct cooperation with Belarus which now has observer status in CBSS • European Humanities University (EHU) in exile in Vilnius with funding from of NCM and individual countries
CBSS • Lithuanian Presidency since 1st July 2009 • Objectives -lift barriers for cooperation, encourage more freedom of movement of people and exchange of ideas, participation of Belarus in the EP Initiative and dialogue with EU -Kaliningrad region and Belarus have to become full-fledged members of the region
So what? • EAIR has consolidated its place in the family of organisations • unique target group mixing theory, policy and practice • a mixed target group is a mixed blessing • how important is EAIR to its members? • why do members join and stay?
So what? • we serve a purpose, no need to reinvent • relatively steady Forum participation • core group of members (big enough?) • almost half pay their fees without Forum Still • almost total lack of interest in EC membership and elections • responsibilities, costs and rewards
So what? • how to find Forum hosts? • Forums only not enough (too few, takes too much time, too big?) • proactive strategy and a clearly agreed division of labour between EC and Executive Manager/Secretariat • environmental scanning and contacts with other organisations (France?)
So what? • joint events with other organisations (BSRUN/EAIR example) • Southern part of Eastern Europe, Belarus, Ukraine, Russia? Global AIR? • who covers membership and Forum fees? • university policy on individual memberships? • central administration budget?
So what? • NUAS/NUS/BSRUN policy: institutional membership serving many target groups • how do universities tell about their memberships (web page, intro, [logo]) • EUA, Coimbra, UNICA, Utrecht, LERU (IRUN [Nijmegen], U4 Network [Groningen]), IAU (International Association of Universities, 1950, 600+ members in about 120 countries)
So what? • additional sources of funding? • EU funding and joint actions (MODERN; professional development programmes) • cost-effective Secretariat (synergy with EAIE [also in activities?]) • fees rising (bigger Secretariats; Coimbra) • publications policy (TEAM and monographs electronic?)